BCL-XL is crucial for progression through the adenoma-to-carcinoma sequence of colorectal cancer
Publication date
2021-12
Authors
Ramesh, Prashanthi
Lannagan, Tamsin R.M.
Jackstadt, Rene
Atencia Taboada, Lidia
Lansu, Nico
Wirapati, Pratyaksha
van Hooff, Sander R.
Dekker, Danielle
Pritchard, Jessica
Kirov, Aleksandar B.
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Document Type
Article
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cc_by
Abstract
Evasion of apoptosis is a hallmark of cancer, which is frequently mediated by upregulation of the antiapoptotic BCL-2 family proteins. In colorectal cancer (CRC), previous work has highlighted differential antiapoptotic protein dependencies determined by the stage of the disease. While intestinal stem cells (ISCs) require BCL-2 for adenoma outgrowth and survival during transformation, ISC-specific MCL1 deletion results in disturbed intestinal homeostasis, eventually contributing to tumorigenesis. Colon cancer stem cells (CSCs), however, no longer require BCL-2 and depend mainly on BCL-XL for their survival. We therefore hypothesized that a shift in antiapoptotic protein reliance occurs in ISCs as the disease progresses from normal to adenoma to carcinoma. By targeting antiapoptotic proteins with specific BH3 mimetics in organoid models of CRC progression, we found that BCL-2 is essential only during ISC transformation while MCL1 inhibition did not affect adenoma outgrowth. BCL-XL, on the other hand, was crucial for stem cell survival throughout the adenoma-to-carcinoma sequence. Furthermore, we identified that the limited window of BCL-2 reliance is a result of its downregulation by miR-17-5p, a microRNA that is upregulated upon APC-mutation driven transformation. Here we show that BCL-XL inhibition effectively impairs adenoma outgrowth in vivo and enhances the efficacy of chemotherapy. In line with this dependency, expression of BCL-XL, but not BCL-2 or MCL1, directly correlated to the outcome of chemotherapy-treated CRC patients. Our results provide insights to enable the rational use of BH3 mimetics in CRC management, particularly underlining the therapeutic potential of BCL-XL targeting mimetics in both early and late-stage disease.
Keywords
Molecular Biology, Cell Biology
Citation
Ramesh, P, Lannagan, T R M, Jackstadt, R, Atencia Taboada, L, Lansu, N, Wirapati, P, van Hooff, S R, Dekker, D, Pritchard, J, Kirov, A B, van Neerven, S M, Tejpar, S, Kops, G J P L, Sansom, O J & Medema, J P 2021, 'BCL-XL is crucial for progression through the adenoma-to-carcinoma sequence of colorectal cancer', Cell Death and Differentiation, vol. 28, no. 12, pp. 3282-3296. https://doi.org/10.1038/s41418-021-00816-w