Mutant p53 regulates Survivin to foster lung metastasis

Author:

Tang Qiaosi,Efe Gizem,Chiarella Anna M.,Leung JessicaORCID,Chen Maoting,Yamazoe Taiji,Su Zhenyi,Pitarresi Jason R.,Li Jinyang,Islam Mirazul,Karakasheva Tatiana,Klein-Szanto Andres J.,Pan Samuel,Hu Jianhua,Natsugoe Shoji,Gu Wei,Stanger Ben Z.ORCID,Wong Kwok-K,Diehl J. Alan,Bass Adam J.,Nakagawa Hiroshi,Murphy Maureen E.,Rustgi Anil K.

Abstract

Esophageal squamous cell carcinoma (ESCC) is one of the most lethal cancers worldwide and evolves often to lung metastasis. P53R175H (homologous to Trp53R172H in mice) is a common hot spot mutation. How metastasis is regulated by p53R175H in ESCC remains to be investigated. To investigate p53R175H-mediated molecular mechanisms, we used a carcinogen-induced approach in Trp53R172H/− mice to model ESCC. In the primary Trp53R172H/− tumor cell lines, we depleted Trp53R172H (shTrp53) and observed a marked reduction in cell invasion in vitro and lung metastasis burden in a tail-vein injection model in comparing isogenic cells (shCtrl). Furthermore, we performed bulk RNA-seq to compare gene expression profiles of metastatic and primary shCtrl and shTrp53 cells. We identified the YAP-BIRC5 axis as a potential mediator of Trp53R172H-mediated metastasis. We demonstrate that expression of Survivin, an antiapoptotic protein encoded by BIRC5, increases in the presence of Trp53R172H. Furthermore, depletion of Survivin specifically decreases Trp53R172H-driven lung metastasis. Mechanistically, Trp53R172H but not wild-type Trp53, binds with YAP in ESCC cells, suggesting their cooperation to induce Survivin expression. Furthermore, Survivin high expression level is associated with increased metastasis in several GI cancers. Taken together, this study unravels new insights into how mutant p53 mediates metastasis.

Funder

National Institutes of Health

American Cancer Society

Publisher

Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory

Subject

Developmental Biology,Genetics

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