Human papillomavirus-associated head and neck squamous cell carcinoma cells lose viability during triggered myocyte lineage differentiation
Metadatos
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Gendreizig, Sarah; Martínez Ruiz, Laura; López Rodríguez, Alba; Pabla, Harkiren; Hose, Leonie; Brasch, Frank; Busche, Tobias; Escames Rosa, Germaine; Sudhoff, Holger; Uwe Scholtz, Lars; Todt, Ingo; Oppel, FelixEditorial
SpringerLink
Fecha
2024-06-25Referencia bibliográfica
Gendreizig, S. et. al. Cell Death Dis 15, 517 (2024). [https://doi.org/10.1038/s41419-024-06867-4]
Patrocinador
3-year Head and neck cancer program of the Medical Faculty OWL at Bielefeld University; Ministerio de Ciencia e Innovación/AEI: Agencia Estatal de Investigación/10.13039/501100011033/y financiado por la Unión Europea “NextGenerationEU”/PRTR (PID2020‐115112RB‐I00); Open Access funding enabled and organized by Projekt DEALResumen
Head and neck squamous cell carcinoma (HNSCC) is a highly malignant disease, and death rates have remained at approximately
50% for decades. New tumor-targeting strategies are desperately needed, and a previous report indicated the triggered
differentiation of HPV-negative HNSCC cells to confer therapeutic benefits. Using patient-derived tumor cells, we created a similar
HNSCC differentiation model of HPV+ tumor cells from two patients. We observed a loss of malignant characteristics in
differentiating cell culture conditions, including irregularly enlarged cell morphology, cell cycle arrest with downregulation of Ki67,
and reduced cell viability. RNA-Seq showed myocyte-like differentiation with upregulation of markers of myofibril assembly.
Immunofluorescence staining of differentiated and undifferentiated primary HPV+ HNSCC cells confirmed an upregulation of these
markers and the formation of parallel actin fibers reminiscent of myoblast-lineage cells. Moreover, immunofluorescence of HPV+
tumor tissue revealed areas of cells co-expressing the identified markers of myofibril assembly, HPV surrogate marker p16, and
stress-associated basal keratinocyte marker KRT17, indicating that the observed myocyte-like in vitro differentiation occurs in
human tissue. We are the first to report that carcinoma cells can undergo a triggered myocyte-like differentiation, and our study
suggests that the targeted differentiation of HPV+ HNSCCs might be therapeutically valuable.