Cancer cell employs a microenvironmental neural signal trans-activating nucleus-mitochondria coordination to acquire stemness

Author:

He BinORCID,Gao Rui,Lv Shasha,Chen Ailin,Huang Junxiu,Wang Luoxuan,Feng Yunxiu,Feng Jiesi,Liu Bing,Lei Jie,Deng Bing,He Bin,Cui Bai,Peng Fei,Yan Min,Wang Zifeng,Lam Eric W-FORCID,Jin Bilian,Shao Zhiming,Li YulongORCID,Jiao JianweiORCID,Wang Xi,Liu Quentin

Abstract

AbstractCancer cell receives extracellular signal inputs to obtain a stem-like status, yet how tumor microenvironmental (TME) neural signals steer cancer stemness to establish the hierarchical tumor architectures remains elusive. Here, a pan-cancer transcriptomic screening for 10852 samples of 33 TCGA cancer types reveals that cAMP-responsive element (CRE) transcription factors are convergent activators for cancer stemness. Deconvolution of transcriptomic profiles, specification of neural markers and illustration of norepinephrine dynamics uncover a bond between TME neural signals and cancer-cell CRE activity. Specifically, neural signal norepinephrine potentiates the stemness of proximal cancer cells by activating cAMP-CRE axis, where ATF1 serves as a conserved hub. Upon activation by norepinephrine, ATF1 potentiates cancer stemness by coordinated trans-activation of both nuclear pluripotency factors MYC/NANOG and mitochondrial biogenesis regulators NRF1/TFAM, thereby orchestrating nuclear reprograming and mitochondrial rejuvenating. Accordingly, single-cell transcriptomes confirm the coordinated activation of nuclear pluripotency with mitochondrial biogenesis in cancer stem-like cells. These findings elucidate that cancer cell acquires stemness via a norepinephrine-ATF1 driven nucleus-mitochondria collaborated program, suggesting a spatialized stemness acquisition by hijacking microenvironmental neural signals.

Publisher

Springer Science and Business Media LLC

Subject

Cancer Research,Genetics

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