Smad4 restricts injury-provoked biliary proliferation and carcinogenesis

Author:

Alexander William B.12ORCID,Wang Wenjia2ORCID,Hill Margaret A.12ORCID,O'Dell Michael R.2ORCID,Ruffolo Luis I.3ORCID,Guo Bing2ORCID,Jackson Katherine M.3ORCID,Ullman Nicholas3,Friedland Scott C.12ORCID,McCall Matthew N.14ORCID,Patel Ankit3ORCID,Figueroa-Guilliani Nathania3,Georger Mary3ORCID,Belt Brian A.3,Whitney-Miller Christa L.5,Linehan David C.3,Murphy Patrick J.1ORCID,Hezel Aram F.12ORCID

Affiliation:

1. University of Rochester Medical Center 1 Department of Biomedical Genetics , , Rochester, NY 14642 , USA

2. Wilmot Cancer Institute, University of Rochester Medical Center 2 Department of Medicine , Hematology/Oncology , , Rochester, NY 14642, USA

3. University of Rochester Medical Center 3 Department of Surgery , , Rochester, NY 14642 , USA

4. University of Rochester Medical Center 4 Department of Biostatistics and Computational Biology , , Rochester, NY 14642 , USA

5. University of Rochester Medical Center 5 Department of Pathology and Laboratory Medicine , , Rochester, NY 14642 , USA

Abstract

ABSTRACT Cholangiocarcinoma (CCA) is a deadly and heterogeneous type of cancer characterized by a spectrum of epidemiologic associations as well as genetic and epigenetic alterations. We seek to understand how these features inter-relate in the earliest phase of cancer development and through the course of disease progression. For this, we studied murine models of liver injury integrating the most commonly occurring gene mutations of CCA – including Kras, Tp53, Arid1a and Smad4 – as well as murine hepatobiliary cancer models and derived primary cell lines based on these mutations. Among commonly mutated genes in CCA, we found that Smad4 functions uniquely to restrict reactive cholangiocyte expansion to liver injury through restraint of the proliferative response. Inactivation of Smad4 accelerates carcinogenesis, provoking pre-neoplastic biliary lesions and CCA development in an injury setting. Expression analyses of Smad4-perturbed reactive cholangiocytes and CCA lines demonstrated shared enriched pathways, including cell-cycle regulation, MYC signaling and oxidative phosphorylation, suggesting that Smad4 may act via these mechanisms to regulate cholangiocyte proliferation and progression to CCA. Overall, we showed that TGFβ/SMAD4 signaling serves as a critical barrier restraining cholangiocyte expansion and malignant transformation in states of biliary injury.

Funder

National Cancer Institute

Wilmot

University of Rochester Medical Center

Publisher

The Company of Biologists

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