Loss of colonic fidelity enables multilineage plasticity and metastasis

Patrizia Cammareri(Western General Hospital), Michela Raponi(Western General Hospital), Yourae Hong(KU Leuven), Caroline V. Billard(Western General Hospital), Nat Peckett(Western General Hospital), Yujia Zhu(Western General Hospital), Fausto D. Velez-Bravo(KU Leuven), Nicholas T. Younger(Western General Hospital), Donncha S. Dunican(Western General Hospital), Sebastian Pohl(Western General Hospital), Aslıhan Bastem Akan(Western General Hospital), Nora J Doleschall(Western General Hospital), John Falconer(Cancer Research UK), Mark White(Cancer Research UK), Jean A. Quinn(University of Glasgow), Kathryn A.F. Pennel(University of Glasgow), Roberta Garau(Western General Hospital), Sudhir B. Malla(Queen's University Belfast), Philip D. Dunne(Queen's University Belfast), Richard R. Meehan(Western General Hospital), Owen J. Sansom(Cancer Research UK), Joanne Edwards(University of Glasgow), Malcolm G. Dunlop(Western General Hospital), Farhat V N Din(Western General Hospital), Sabine Tejpar(KU Leuven), Colin W. Steele(Glasgow Royal Infirmary), Kevin Myant(Edinburgh Cancer Research)
Nature
June 4, 2025
Cited by 23Open Access
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Abstract

Abstract Cancer cell plasticity enables the acquisition of new phenotypic features and is implicated as a major driver of metastatic progression 1,2 . Metastasis occurs mostly in the absence of additional genetic alterations 3–5 , which suggests that epigenetic mechanisms are important 6 . However, they remain poorly defined. Here we identify the chromatin-remodelling enzyme ATRX as a key regulator of colonic lineage fidelity and metastasis in colorectal cancer. Atrx loss promotes tumour invasion and metastasis, concomitant with a loss of colonic epithelial identity and the emergence of highly plastic mesenchymal and squamous-like cell states. Combined analysis of chromatin accessibility and enhancer mapping identified impairment of activity of the colonic lineage-specifying transcription factor HNF4A as a key mediator of these observed phenotypes. We identify squamous-like cells in human patient samples and a squamous-like expression signature that correlates with aggressive disease and poor patient prognosis. Collectively, our study defines the epigenetic maintenance of colonic epithelial identity by ATRX and HNF4A as suppressors of lineage plasticity and metastasis in colorectal cancer.


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