Author:
Zhang Yongchun,Karagiannis Dimitris,Liu Helu,Lin Mi,Fang Yinshan,Jiang Ming,Chen Xiao,Suresh Supriya,Huang Haidi,She Junjun,Shi Feiyu,Yang Patrick,El-Rifai Wael,Zaika Alexander,Oro Anthony E.,Rustgi Anil K.,Wang Timothy C.,Lu Chao,Que Jianwen
Abstract
AbstractWhile cell fate determination and maintenance are important in establishing and preserving tissue identity and function during development, aberrant cell fate transition leads to cancer cell heterogeneity and resistance to treatment. Here, we report an unexpected role for the transcription factor p63 (Trp63/TP63) in the fate choice of squamous versus neuroendocrine lineage in esophageal development and malignancy. Deletion ofp63results in extensive neuroendocrine differentiation in the developing mouse esophagus and esophageal progenitors derived from human embryonic stem cells. In human esophageal neuroendocrine carcinoma (eNEC) cells, p63 is transcriptionally silenced by EZH2-mediated H3K27 trimethylation (H3K27me3). Upregulation of the major p63 isoform ΔNp63α, through either ectopic expression or EZH2 inhibition, promotes squamous transdifferentiation of eNEC cells. Together these findings uncover p63 as a rheostat in coordinating the transition between squamous and neuroendocrine cell fates during esophageal development and tumor progression.
Publisher
Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory