4.7 Article

An LKB1-SIK Axis Suppresses Lung Tumor Growth and Controls Differentiation

Journal

CANCER DISCOVERY
Volume 9, Issue 11, Pages 1590-1605

Publisher

AMER ASSOC CANCER RESEARCH
DOI: 10.1158/2159-8290.CD-18-1237

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Funding

  1. NSF Graduate Research Fellowship Program
  2. Anne T. and Robert M. Bass Stanford Graduate Fellowship
  3. NIH [F31-CA210627, T32-HG000044, F32-CA189659, R01-CA175336, R01-CA207133, R01-CA230919, S10OD018220]
  4. Stanford University School of Medicine Dean's Postdoctoral Fellowship
  5. Stanford University School of Medicine TRDRP Postdoctoral fellowship [27FT-0044]
  6. Stanford Cancer Institute support grant [NIH P30-CA124435]

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The kinase LKB1 is a critical tumor suppressor in sporadic and familial human cancers, yet the mechanisms by which it suppresses tumor growth remain poorly understood. To investigate the tumor-suppressive capacity of four canonical families of LKB1 substrates in vivo, we used CRISPR/Cas9-mediated combinatorial genome editing in a mouse model of oncogenic KRAS-driven lung adenocarcinoma. We demonstrate that members of the SIK family are critical for constraining tumor development. Histologic and gene-expression similarities between LKB1- and SIK-deficient tumors suggest that SIKs and LKB1 operate within the same axis. Furthermore, a gene-expression signature reflecting SIK deficiency is enriched in LKB1-mutant human lung adenocarcinomas and is regulated by LKB1 in human cancer cell lines. Together, these findings reveal a key LKB1-SIK tumor-suppressive axis and underscore the need to redirect efforts to elucidate the mechanisms through which LKB1 mediates tumor suppression. SIGNIFICANCE: Uncovering the effectors of frequently altered tumor suppressor genes is critical for understanding the fundamental driving forces of cancer growth. Our identification of the SIK family of kinases as effectors of LKB1-mediated tumor suppression will refocus future mechanistic studies and may lead to new avenues for genotype-specific therapeutic interventions.

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