HNF4α controls growth, identity and response to KRAS inhibition of invasive mucinous adenocarcinoma of the lung
Abstract
Cellular plasticity is a hallmark of cancer, enabling tumor cells to alter identity and evade therapeutic pressure. In invasive mucinous adenocarcinoma of the lung (IMA), NKX2-1 loss triggers a pulmonary to gastric switch marked by aberrant activation of HNF4α, a master regulator of gastrointestinal/hepatic differentiation. We find that HNF4α promotes IMA growth and activates a gastric pit cell-like program.Hnf4adeletion induces IMA dedifferentiation, enabling FoxA1/2 to access de novo sites and activate alternative identities. HNF4α also induces a mucinous program associated with tolerance to KRAS blockade, and HNF4α loss enhances response to KRASG12Dinhibition. Mechanistically, HNF4α blocks cell cycle exit in drug-tolerant persister cells and promotes activity of the antioxidant transcription factor NRF2. NRF2 activation partially rescues effects ofHnf4adeletion on KRASG12Dinhibition, whereas NRF2 inhibition enhances sensitivity to KRASG12Dblockade. Thus, HNF4α is a key regulator of identity and primary response to KRASG12Dinhibition in IMA.
SIGNIFICANCE
IMA is a genetically and epigenetically distinct LUAD subtype for which targeted therapies are lacking due to the high proportion of KRAS mutations. This study points to blockade of the HNF4α -> NRF2 axis as a potential strategy to enhance primary response to KRAS inhibition in IMA.
Related articles
Related articles are currently not available for this article.