FOXA1 mutations alter pioneering activity, differentiation and prostate cancer phenotypes

Mutations in the transcription factor FOXA1 define a unique subset of prostate cancers but the functional consequences of these mutations and whether they confer gain or loss of function is unknown 1 – 9 . Here, by annotating the landscape of FOXA1 mutations from 3,086 human prostate cancers, we def...

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Published inNature (London) Vol. 571; no. 7765; pp. 408 - 412
Main Authors Adams, Elizabeth J., Karthaus, Wouter R., Hoover, Elizabeth, Liu, Deli, Gruet, Antoine, Zhang, Zeda, Cho, Hyunwoo, DiLoreto, Rose, Chhangawala, Sagar, Liu, Yang, Watson, Philip A., Davicioni, Elai, Sboner, Andrea, Barbieri, Christopher E., Bose, Rohit, Leslie, Christina S., Sawyers, Charles L.
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published London Nature Publishing Group UK 01.07.2019
Nature Publishing Group
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ISSN0028-0836
1476-4687
1476-4687
DOI10.1038/s41586-019-1318-9

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Summary:Mutations in the transcription factor FOXA1 define a unique subset of prostate cancers but the functional consequences of these mutations and whether they confer gain or loss of function is unknown 1 – 9 . Here, by annotating the landscape of FOXA1 mutations from 3,086 human prostate cancers, we define two hotspots in the forkhead domain: Wing2 (around 50% of all mutations) and the highly conserved DNA-contact residue R219 (around 5% of all mutations). Wing2 mutations are detected in adenocarcinomas at all stages, whereas R219 mutations are enriched in metastatic tumours with neuroendocrine histology. Interrogation of the biological properties of wild-type FOXA1 and fourteen FOXA1 mutants reveals gain of function in mouse prostate organoid proliferation assays. Twelve of these mutants, as well as wild-type FOXA1, promoted an exaggerated pro-luminal differentiation program, whereas two different R219 mutants blocked luminal differentiation and activated a mesenchymal and neuroendocrine transcriptional program. Assay for transposase-accessible chromatin using sequencing (ATAC-seq) of wild-type FOXA1 and representative Wing2 and R219 mutants revealed marked, mutant-specific changes in open chromatin at thousands of genomic loci and exposed sites of FOXA1 binding and associated increases in gene expression. Of note, ATAC-seq peaks in cells expressing R219 mutants lacked the canonical core FOXA1-binding motifs (GTAAAC/T) but were enriched for a related, non-canonical motif (GTAAAG/A), which was preferentially activated by R219-mutant FOXA1 in reporter assays. Thus, FOXA1 mutations alter its pioneering function and perturb normal luminal epithelial differentiation programs, providing further support for the role of lineage plasticity in cancer progression. Mutations in the transcription factor FOXA1 that are common in prostate cancer result in gain-of-function effects that promote changes in the differentiation of tumour cells.
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C.L.S. has the following disclosures: he serves on the Board of Directors of Novartis, is a co-founder of ORIC Pharm and co-inventor of enzalutamide and apalutamide. He is a science advisor to Agios, Beigene, Blueprint, Column Group, Foghorn, Housey Pharma, Nextech, KSQ, Petra and PMV. He was a co-founder of Seragon, purchased by Genentech/Roche in 2014.
E.J.A. and C.L.S. conceived and oversaw the project, performed data interpretation, and co-wrote the manuscript. E.J.A and E.H. performed immunoblots, in vitro cell growth assays, lumen formation assays, lumen area quantification, processed organoids for immunohistochemistry, and prepared experiments for RNA-seq and ATAC-seq. E.J.A, E.H. and W.R.K. made three-dimensional organoid lines. W.R.K, E.H., and P.A.W. cloned plasmid reagents. E.J.A., E.H., W.R.K, and Z.Z. carried out in vivo experiments. E.J.A., R.B., and D.L. performed RNA-seq analysis and gene set enrichment analysis. E.J.A, R.B., D.L., A.S., Y.L., E.D. and C.E.B. performed analysis of human prostate cancer cohorts. A.G. optimized and carried out ATAC and ChIP protocols. R.D., S.C., H.C., and C.S.L. carried out ATAC-sequencing and ChIP-sequencing data analysis. All individual authors made intellectual contributions and reviewed the manuscript.
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ISSN:0028-0836
1476-4687
1476-4687
DOI:10.1038/s41586-019-1318-9