The EACR’s ‘Highlights in Cancer Research’ is a regular summary of the most interesting and impactful recent papers in cancer research, curated by the Board of the European Association for Cancer Research (EACR).
The list below appears in no particular order, and the summary information has been provided by the authors unless otherwise indicated.
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1. Epigenetic plasticity cooperates with cell-cell interactions to direct pancreatic tumorigenesis
Burdziak, C., Alonso-Curbelo, D. et al. Science. 380 (6645): eadd5327 (2023).
doi: 10.1126/science.add5327.
Summary of the findings
Pancreatic cancer is typically diagnosed late, with few treatment options, motivating a search for early intervention strategies to improve outcomes. In this paper, the authors leveraged genetically engineered mouse models to obtain a high-resolution view of pancreatic tissue during the earliest stages of cancer progression. Single-cell transcriptomic sequencing identified cellular phenotypes that are absent from normal pancreatic epithelia, but emerge following oncogenic Kras mutation. Exposure of these cells to inflammation—a condition known to provoke the onset of rapid tumorigenesis—triggers a transition toward neoplastic states from several distinct cellular origins. Among these, a highly plastic, Nestin-expressing progenitor-like population serves as the precursor for neoplastic states that predominate in the pancreas weeks or months later. By integrating epigenetic data, the authors revealed that highly plastic populations undergo global chromatin reprogramming, heightened in the vicinity of cell-cell communication genes, which alter the way these cells send and receive signals from their environment. They developed a computational approach to catalogue the set of receptors and ligands that define the communication capabilities of each plastic epithelial state and linked these ‘communication modules’ with relevant modules in tissue immune cells to define a pre-malignant cell-cell interaction network. This analysis identified a feedback loop between epithelial cells and regulatory T cells in the microenvironment, which drives the exit from plastic states toward neoplastic endpoints.
A genetically engineered mouse model harboring mutant Kras in the pancreatic epithelium is subject to inflammation, inducing pancreatitis-driven tumorigenesis. Within 48 hours, chromatin opening near cell-cell communication genes opens channels of communication in plastic cells. Emergent signaling from gastric-like populations to progenitor-like cells involves multiple receptor-ligand pairs. Mouse illustration was created with BioRender (https://biorender.com/).
Future impact
This work sheds light on the earliest events driving cancer progression, focusing on how genetic mutation cooperates with environmental factors such as inflammation to initiate disease. The cellular plasticity and cell-cell communication mechanisms that are shown to underly disease onset and early progression provide several potential targets for cancer therapeutics.
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