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LKB1 modulates lung cancer differentiation and metastasis
Authors:Ji Hongbin  Ramsey Matthew R  Hayes D Neil  Fan Cheng  McNamara Kate  Kozlowski Piotr  Torrice Chad  Wu Michael C  Shimamura Takeshi  Perera Samanthi A  Liang Mei-Chih  Cai Dongpo  Naumov George N  Bao Lei  Contreras Cristina M  Li Danan  Chen Liang  Krishnamurthy Janakiraman  Koivunen Jussi  Chirieac Lucian R  Padera Robert F  Bronson Roderick T  Lindeman Neal I  Christiani David C  Lin Xihong  Shapiro Geoffrey I  Jänne Pasi A  Johnson Bruce E  Meyerson Matthew  Kwiatkowski David J  Castrillon Diego H  Bardeesy Nabeel  Sharpless Norman E  Wong Kwok-Kin
Institution:Department of Medical Oncology, Dana-Farber Cancer Institute, Boston, Massachusetts 02115, USA
Abstract:Germline mutation in serine/threonine kinase 11 (STK11, also called LKB1) results in Peutz-Jeghers syndrome, characterized by intestinal hamartomas and increased incidence of epithelial cancers. Although uncommon in most sporadic cancers, inactivating somatic mutations of LKB1 have been reported in primary human lung adenocarcinomas and derivative cell lines. Here we used a somatically activatable mutant Kras-driven model of mouse lung cancer to compare the role of Lkb1 to other tumour suppressors in lung cancer. Although Kras mutation cooperated with loss of p53 or Ink4a/Arf (also known as Cdkn2a) in this system, the strongest cooperation was seen with homozygous inactivation of Lkb1. Lkb1-deficient tumours demonstrated shorter latency, an expanded histological spectrum (adeno-, squamous and large-cell carcinoma) and more frequent metastasis compared to tumours lacking p53 or Ink4a/Arf. Pulmonary tumorigenesis was also accelerated by hemizygous inactivation of Lkb1. Consistent with these findings, inactivation of LKB1 was found in 34% and 19% of 144 analysed human lung adenocarcinomas and squamous cell carcinomas, respectively. Expression profiling in human lung cancer cell lines and mouse lung tumours identified a variety of metastasis-promoting genes, such as NEDD9, VEGFC and CD24, as targets of LKB1 repression in lung cancer. These studies establish LKB1 as a critical barrier to pulmonary tumorigenesis, controlling initiation, differentiation and metastasis.
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