TNF receptor-related factor 3 inactivation promotes the development of intrahepatic cholangiocarcinoma through NF-κB-inducing kinase-mediated hepatocyte transdifferentiation

TNF 受体相关因子 3 失活通过 NF-κB 诱导激酶介导的肝细胞转分化促进肝内胆管癌的发展

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作者:Yuto Shiode, Takahiro Kodama, Satoshi Shigeno, Kazuhiro Murai, Satoshi Tanaka, Justin Y Newberg, Jumpei Kondo, Shogo Kobayashi, Ryoko Yamada, Hayato Hikita, Ryotaro Sakamori, Hiroshi Suemizu, Tomohide Tatsumi, Hidetoshi Eguchi, Nancy A Jenkins, Neal G Copeland, Tetsuo Takehara

Aims

Intrahepatic cholangiocarcinoma (ICC) is a deadly but poorly understood disease, and its treatment options are very limited. The aim of this study was to identify the molecular drivers of ICC and search for therapeutic targets. Approach and

Approach and results

We performed a Sleeping Beauty transposon-based in vivo insertional mutagenesis screen in liver-specific Pten -deficient mice and identified TNF receptor-related factor 3 ( Traf3 ) as the most significantly mutated gene in murine ICCs in a loss-of-function manner. Liver-specific Traf3 deletion caused marked cholangiocyte overgrowth and spontaneous development of ICC in Pten knockout and KrasG12D mutant mice. Hepatocyte-specific, but not cholangiocyte-specific, Traf3 -deficient and Pten -deficient mice recapitulated these phenotypes. Lineage tracing and single-cell RNA sequencing suggested that these ICCs were derived from hepatocytes through transdifferentiation. TRAF3 and PTEN inhibition induced a transdifferentiation-like phenotype of hepatocyte-lineage cells into proliferative cholangiocytes through NF-κB-inducing kinase (NIK) up-regulation in vitro. Intrahepatic NIK levels were elevated in liver-specific Traf3 -deficient and Pten -deficient mice, and NIK inhibition alleviated cholangiocyte overgrowth. In human ICCs, we identified an inverse correlation between TRAF3 and NIK expression, with low TRAF3 or high NIK expression associated with poor prognosis. Finally, we showed that NIK inhibition by a small molecule inhibitor or gene silencing suppressed the growth of multiple human ICC cells in vitro and ICC xenografts in vivo. Conclusions: TRAF3 inactivation promotes ICC development through NIK-mediated hepatocyte transdifferentiation. The oncogenic TRAF3-NIK axis may be a potential therapeutic target for ICC.

Background and aims

Intrahepatic cholangiocarcinoma (ICC) is a deadly but poorly understood disease, and its treatment options are very limited. The aim of this study was to identify the molecular drivers of ICC and search for therapeutic targets. Approach and

Conclusions

TRAF3 inactivation promotes ICC development through NIK-mediated hepatocyte transdifferentiation. The oncogenic TRAF3-NIK axis may be a potential therapeutic target for ICC.

Results

We performed a Sleeping Beauty transposon-based in vivo insertional mutagenesis screen in liver-specific Pten -deficient mice and identified TNF receptor-related factor 3 ( Traf3 ) as the most significantly mutated gene in murine ICCs in a loss-of-function manner. Liver-specific Traf3 deletion caused marked cholangiocyte overgrowth and spontaneous development of ICC in Pten knockout and KrasG12D mutant mice. Hepatocyte-specific, but not cholangiocyte-specific, Traf3 -deficient and Pten -deficient mice recapitulated these phenotypes. Lineage tracing and single-cell RNA sequencing suggested that these ICCs were derived from hepatocytes through transdifferentiation. TRAF3 and PTEN inhibition induced a transdifferentiation-like phenotype of hepatocyte-lineage cells into proliferative cholangiocytes through NF-κB-inducing kinase (NIK) up-regulation in vitro. Intrahepatic NIK levels were elevated in liver-specific Traf3 -deficient and Pten -deficient mice, and NIK inhibition alleviated cholangiocyte overgrowth. In human ICCs, we identified an inverse correlation between TRAF3 and NIK expression, with low TRAF3 or high NIK expression associated with poor prognosis. Finally, we showed that NIK inhibition by a small molecule inhibitor or gene silencing suppressed the growth of multiple human ICC cells in vitro and ICC xenografts in vivo. Conclusions: TRAF3 inactivation promotes ICC development through NIK-mediated hepatocyte transdifferentiation. The oncogenic TRAF3-NIK axis may be a potential therapeutic target for ICC.

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