4.8 Article

Novel K6-K14 keratin fusion enhances cancer sternness and aggressiveness in oral squamous cell carcinoma

Journal

ONCOGENE
Volume 38, Issue 26, Pages 5113-5126

Publisher

NATURE PUBLISHING GROUP
DOI: 10.1038/s41388-019-0781-y

Keywords

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Funding

  1. Ministry of Science and Technology (MOST), Taiwan [NSC-102-2628-B-039-001-MY3, MOST 103-2314-B-039-009-MY3, MOST 106-2314-B-110-001-MY3]
  2. NSYSU-KMU joint research projects [107-P012, 105-P021]

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Keratin intermediate filament (IF) is one component of cellular architectures, which provides necessary mechanical support to conquer environmental stresses. Recent findings reveal its involvement in mechano-transduction and the associated stem cell reprogramming, suggesting the possible roles in cancer development. Here, we report t(12;17)(q13.13;q21.2) chromosomal rearrangement as the most common fusion event in OSCC, resulting in a variety of inter-keratin fusions. Junction site mapping verified 9 in-frame K6-K14 variants, three of which were correlated with lymph node invasion, late tumor stages (T3/T4) and shorter disease-free survival times. When expressed in OSCC cells, those fusion variants disturbed wild-type K14 organization through direct interaction or aggregate formation, leading to perinuclear structure loss and nuclear deformation. Protein array analyses showed the ability of K6-K14 variant 7 (K6-K14/V7) to upregulate TGF-beta and G-CSF signaling, which contributed to cell stemness, drug tolerance, and cell aggressiveness. Notably, K6-K14/V7-expressing cells easily adapted to a soft 3-D culture condition in vitro and formed larger, less differentiated tumors in vivo. In addition to the anti-mechanical-stress activity, our data uncover oncogenic functionality of novel keratin filaments caused by gene fusions during OSCC development.

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