Oncogenic signaling is coupled to colorectal cancer cell differentiation state

Publication date

2023-04

Authors

Sell, Thomas
Klotz, Christian
Fischer, Matthias M.
Astaburuaga-García, Rosario
Krug, Susanne
Drost, Jarno
Clevers, HansISNI 0000000043961208
Sers, Christine
Morkel, Markus
Blüthgen, Nils

Editors

Advisors

Supervisors

Document Type

Article

Collections

Open Access logo

License

cc_by_nc_sa

Abstract

Colorectal cancer progression is intrinsically linked to stepwise deregulation of the intestinal differentiation trajectory. In this process, sequential mutations of APC, KRAS, TP53, and SMAD4 enable oncogenic signaling and establish the hallmarks of cancer. Here, we use mass cytometry of isogenic human colon organoids and patient-derived cancer organoids to capture oncogenic signaling, cell phenotypes, and differentiation states in a high-dimensional single-cell map. We define a differentiation axis in all tumor progression states from normal to cancer. Our data show that colorectal cancer driver mutations shape the distribution of cells along the differentiation axis. In this regard, subsequent mutations can have stem cell promoting or restricting effects. Individual nodes of the cancer cell signaling network remain coupled to the differentiation state, regardless of the presence of driver mutations. We use single-cell RNA sequencing to link the (phospho-)protein signaling network to transcriptomic states with biological and clinical relevance. Our work highlights how oncogenes gradually shape signaling and transcriptomes during tumor progression.

Keywords

Cell Biology

Citation

Sell, T, Klotz, C, Fischer, M M, Astaburuaga-García, R, Krug, S, Drost, J, Clevers, H, Sers, C, Morkel, M & Blüthgen, N 2023, 'Oncogenic signaling is coupled to colorectal cancer cell differentiation state', Journal of Cell Biology, vol. 222, no. 6, e202204001. https://doi.org/10.1083/JCB.202204001