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Publication : Fbxw7 is a driver of uterine carcinosarcoma by promoting epithelial-mesenchymal transition.

First Author  Cuevas IC Year  2019
Journal  Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A Volume  116
Issue  51 Pages  25880-25890
PubMed ID  31772025 Mgi Jnum  J:282812
Mgi Id  MGI:6383340 Doi  10.1073/pnas.1911310116
Citation  Cuevas IC, et al. (2019) Fbxw7 is a driver of uterine carcinosarcoma by promoting epithelial-mesenchymal transition. Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A 116(51):25880-25890
abstractText  Uterine carcinosarcoma is an aggressive variant of endometrial carcinoma characterized by unusual histologic features including discrete malignant epithelial and mesenchymal components (carcinoma and sarcoma). Recent studies have confirmed a monoclonal origin, and comprehensive genomic characterizations have identified mutations such as Tp53 and Pten However, the biological origins and specific combination of driver events underpinning uterine carcinosarcoma have remained mysterious. Here, we explored the role of the tumor suppressor Fbxw7 in endometrial cancer through defined genetic model systems. Inactivation of Fbxw7 and Pten resulted in the formation of precancerous lesions (endometrioid intraepithelial neoplasia) and well-differentiated endometrioid adenocarcinomas. Surprisingly, all adenocarcinomas eventually developed into definitive uterine carcinosarcomas with carcinomatous and sarcomatous elements including heterologous differentiation, yielding a faithful genetically engineered model of this cancer type. Genomic analysis showed that most tumors spontaneously acquired Trp53 mutations, pointing to a triad of pathways (p53, PI3K, and Fbxw7) as the critical combination underpinning uterine carcinosarcoma, and to Fbxw7 as a key driver of this enigmatic endometrial cancer type. Lineage tracing provided formal genetic proof that the uterine carcinosarcoma cell of origin is an endometrial epithelial cell that subsequently undergoes a prominent epithelial-mesenchymal transition underlying the attainment of a highly invasive phenotype specifically driven by Fbxw7.
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