Reversing Cancer Cell Fate: Driving Therapeutic Differentiation of Hepatoblastoma to Functional Hepatocyte-Like Cells
| dc.contributor.advisor | Wen Xue | |
| dc.contributor.author | Smith, Jordan L. | |
| dc.date | 2022-08-11T08:08:38.000 | |
| dc.date.accessioned | 2022-08-23T16:02:18Z | |
| dc.date.available | 2022-08-23T16:02:18Z | |
| dc.date.issued | 2020-03-20 | |
| dc.date.submitted | 2020-04-24 | |
| dc.identifier.doi | 10.13028/3cd6-va15 | |
| dc.identifier.uri | http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.14038/31290 | |
| dc.description.abstract | Background & Aims: Despite advances in surgical care and chemotherapeutic regimens, the five-year survival rate for Stage IV Hepatoblastoma (HB), the predominant pediatric liver tumor, remains at 27%. YAP1 and β-Catenin co-activation occurs in 80% of children’s HB; however, a lack of conditional genetic models precludes exploration of tumor maintenance and therapeutic targets. Thus, the clinical need for a targeted therapy remains unmet. Given the predominance of YAP1 and β-catenin activation in children’s tumors, I sought to evaluate YAP1 as a therapeutic target in HB. Approach & Results: Herein, I engineered the first conditional murine model of HB using hydrodynamic injection to deliver transposon plasmids encoding inducible YAP1S127A, constitutive β-CateninDelN90, and a luciferase reporter to murine liver. Tumor regression was evaluated using in vivo bioluminescent imaging, and tumor landscape characterized using RNA sequencing, ATAC sequencing and DNA foot-printing. Here I show that YAP1 withdrawal in mice mediates >90% tumor regression with survival for 230+ days. Mechanistically, YAP1 withdrawal promotes apoptosis in a subset of tumor cells and in remaining cells induces a cell fate switch driving therapeutic differentiation of HB tumors into Ki-67 negative “hbHep cells.” hbHep cells have hepatocyte-like morphology and partially restored mature hepatocyte gene expression. YAP1 withdrawal drives formation of hbHeps by modulating liver differentiation transcription factor (TF) occupancy. Indeed, tumor-derived hbHeps, consistent with their reprogrammed transcriptional landscape, regain partial hepatocyte function and can rescue liver damage in mice. Conclusions: YAP1 withdrawal, without modulation of oncogenic β-Catenin, significantly regresses hepatoblastoma, providing the first in vivo data to support YAP1 as a therapeutic target for HB. Modulating YAP1 expression alone is sufficient to drive long-term regression in hepatoblastoma because it promotes cell death in a subset of tumor cells and modulates transcription factor occupancy to reverse the fate of residual tumor cells to mimic functional hepatocytes. | |
| dc.language.iso | en_US | |
| dc.rights | Copyright is held by the author, with all rights reserved. | |
| dc.subject | Therapeutic Differentiation | |
| dc.subject | Targeted Therapy | |
| dc.subject | Pediatric Cancer | |
| dc.subject | Oncogene | |
| dc.subject | Liver cancer | |
| dc.subject | Mouse Model | |
| dc.subject | Conditional Model | |
| dc.subject | Genetic | |
| dc.subject | Inducible | |
| dc.subject | Hepatoblastoma | |
| dc.subject | Oncogene Addiction | |
| dc.subject | Tumor Dormancy | |
| dc.subject | Drug Discovery | |
| dc.subject | YAP | |
| dc.subject | B-Catenin | |
| dc.subject | Hydrodynamic Injection | |
| dc.subject | Sleeping Beauty System | |
| dc.subject | Tranposase | |
| dc.subject | Lineage Tracing | |
| dc.subject | Cancer Biology | |
| dc.subject | Cell Biology | |
| dc.subject | Congenital, Hereditary, and Neonatal Diseases and Abnormalities | |
| dc.subject | Digestive System | |
| dc.subject | Digestive System Diseases | |
| dc.subject | Disease Modeling | |
| dc.subject | Gastroenterology | |
| dc.subject | Genetic Processes | |
| dc.subject | Genetics | |
| dc.subject | Hepatology | |
| dc.subject | Laboratory and Basic Science Research | |
| dc.subject | Medical Molecular Biology | |
| dc.subject | Molecular Genetics | |
| dc.subject | Neoplasms | |
| dc.subject | Oncology | |
| dc.subject | Pediatrics | |
| dc.subject | Translational Medical Research | |
| dc.title | Reversing Cancer Cell Fate: Driving Therapeutic Differentiation of Hepatoblastoma to Functional Hepatocyte-Like Cells | |
| dc.type | Doctoral Dissertation | |
| dc.identifier.legacyfulltext | https://escholarship.umassmed.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=2077&context=gsbs_diss&unstamped=1 | |
| dc.identifier.legacycoverpage | https://escholarship.umassmed.edu/gsbs_diss/1067 | |
| dc.legacy.embargo | 2022-04-24T00:00:00-07:00 | |
| dc.identifier.contextkey | 17514124 | |
| refterms.dateFOA | 2022-08-25T04:51:47Z | |
| html.description.abstract | <p><strong>Background & Aims</strong>: Despite advances in surgical care and chemotherapeutic regimens, the five-year survival rate for Stage IV Hepatoblastoma (HB), the predominant pediatric liver tumor, remains at 27%. YAP1 and β-Catenin co-activation occurs in 80% of children’s HB; however, a lack of conditional genetic models precludes exploration of tumor maintenance and therapeutic targets. Thus, the clinical need for a targeted therapy remains unmet. Given the predominance of YAP1 and β-catenin activation in children’s tumors, I sought to evaluate YAP1 as a therapeutic target in HB.</p> <p><strong>Approach & Results:</strong> Herein, I engineered the first conditional murine model of HB using hydrodynamic injection to deliver transposon plasmids encoding inducible YAP1<sup>S127A</sup>, constitutive β-Catenin<sup>DelN90</sup>, and a luciferase reporter to murine liver. Tumor regression was evaluated using in vivo bioluminescent imaging, and tumor landscape characterized using RNA sequencing, ATAC sequencing and DNA foot-printing. Here I show that YAP1 withdrawal in mice mediates >90% tumor regression with survival for 230+ days. Mechanistically, YAP1 withdrawal promotes apoptosis in a subset of tumor cells and in remaining cells induces a cell fate switch driving therapeutic differentiation of HB tumors into Ki-67 negative “hbHep cells.” hbHep cells have hepatocyte-like morphology and partially restored mature hepatocyte gene expression. YAP1 withdrawal drives formation of hbHeps by modulating liver differentiation transcription factor (TF) occupancy. Indeed, tumor-derived hbHeps, consistent with their reprogrammed transcriptional landscape, regain partial hepatocyte function and can rescue liver damage in mice.</p> <p><strong>Conclusions:</strong> YAP1 withdrawal, without modulation of oncogenic β-Catenin, significantly regresses hepatoblastoma, providing the first <em>in vivo</em> data to support YAP1 as a therapeutic target for HB. Modulating YAP1 expression alone is sufficient to drive long-term regression in hepatoblastoma because it promotes cell death in a subset of tumor cells and modulates transcription factor occupancy to reverse the fate of residual tumor cells to mimic functional hepatocytes.</p> | |
| dc.identifier.submissionpath | gsbs_diss/1067 | |
| dc.contributor.department | RNA Therapeutics Institute, MD/PhD Program, Cancer Biology | |
| dc.description.thesisprogram | Cancer Biology | |
| dc.identifier.orcid | 0000-0003-0460-0647 |
