YAP-driven malignant reprogramming of oral epithelial stem cells at single cell resolution

Farhoud Faraji(UC San Diego Health System), Sydney I. Ramirez(La Jolla Institute for Immunology), Lauren Clubb(University of California San Diego), Kuniaki Sato(University of California San Diego), Valeria Burghi(University of California San Diego), Thomas S. Hoang(University of California San Diego), Adam Officer(University of California San Diego), Paola Y. Anguiano Quiroz(University of California San Diego), William M. G. Galloway(University of California, Irvine), Zbigniew Mikulski(La Jolla Institute for Immunology), Kate Medetgul-Ernar(University of California San Diego), Pauline Marangoni(University of California, San Francisco), Kyle B. Jones(University of California, San Francisco), Yuwei Cao(University of California San Diego), Alfredo Molinolo(University of California San Diego), Kenneth Kim(La Jolla Institute for Immunology), Kanako Sakaguchi, Joseph A. Califano(University of California San Diego), Quinton Smith(University of California, Irvine), Alon Goren(University of California San Diego Medical Center), Ophir D. Klein(Cedars-Sinai Medical Center), Pablo Tamayo(University of California San Diego), J. Silvio Gutkind(UC San Diego Health System)
Nature Communications
January 8, 2025
Cited by 18Open Access
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Abstract

Tumor initiation represents the first step in tumorigenesis during which normal progenitor cells undergo cell fate transition to cancer. Capturing this process as it occurs in vivo, however, remains elusive. Here we employ spatiotemporally controlled oncogene activation and tumor suppressor inhibition together with multiomics to unveil the processes underlying oral epithelial progenitor cell reprogramming into tumor initiating cells at single cell resolution. Tumor initiating cells displayed a distinct stem-like state, defined by aberrant proliferative, hypoxic, squamous differentiation, and partial epithelial to mesenchymal invasive gene programs. YAP-mediated tumor initiating cell programs included activation of oncogenic transcriptional networks and mTOR signaling, and recruitment of myeloid cells to the invasive front contributing to tumor infiltration. Tumor initiating cell transcriptional programs are conserved in human head and neck cancer and associated with poor patient survival. These findings illuminate processes underlying cancer initiation at single cell resolution, and identify candidate targets for early cancer detection and prevention.


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