Lineage plasticity in cancer: a shared pathway of therapeutic resistance
Lineage plasticity, the ability of cells to transition from one committed developmental pathway to another, has been proposed as a source of intratumoural heterogeneity and of tumour adaptation to an adverse tumour microenvironment including exposure to targeted anticancer treatments. Tumour cell co...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Nature reviews. Clinical oncology 2020-06, Vol.17 (6), p.360-371 |
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Zusammenfassung: | Lineage plasticity, the ability of cells to transition from one committed developmental pathway to another, has been proposed as a source of intratumoural heterogeneity and of tumour adaptation to an adverse tumour microenvironment including exposure to targeted anticancer treatments. Tumour cell conversion into a different histological subtype has been associated with a loss of dependency on the original oncogenic driver, leading to therapeutic resistance. A well-known pathway of lineage plasticity in cancer — the histological transformation of adenocarcinomas to aggressive neuroendocrine derivatives — was initially described in lung cancers harbouring an
EGFR
mutation, and was subsequently reported in multiple other adenocarcinomas, including prostate cancer in the presence of antiandrogens. Squamous transformation is a subsequently identified and less well-characterized pathway of adenocarcinoma escape from suppressive anticancer therapy. The increased practice of tumour re-biopsy upon disease progression has increased the recognition of these mechanisms of resistance and has improved our understanding of the underlying biology. In this Review, we provide an overview of the impact of lineage plasticity on cancer progression and therapy resistance, with a focus on neuroendocrine transformation in lung and prostate tumours. We discuss the current understanding of the molecular drivers of this phenomenon, emerging management strategies and open questions in the field.
Lineage plasticity is a source of intratumoural heterogeneity and enables tumour adaptation to an adverse tumour microenvironment, eventually leading to therapeutic resistance. The authors of this Review provide an overview of the impact of lineage plasticity on cancer progression and therapy resistance, with a focus on neuroendocrine transformation in lung and prostate tumours, and discuss emerging management strategies and open questions in the field.
Key points
Lineage plasticity can promote both metastasis and therapy resistance.
Histological transformation occurs in up to 5% of
EGFR
-mutant lung adenocarcinomas and at least 20% of prostate adenocarcinomas on targeted therapy.
RB1 and p53 deficiency are implicated in — but not sufficient for — neuroendocrine transformation.
AKT pathway activation and aberrant activity of the MYC and SOX families of transcriptional regulators have been implicated as being effectors of histological transformation. |
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ISSN: | 1759-4774 1759-4782 |
DOI: | 10.1038/s41571-020-0340-z |