posted on 2025-01-16, 11:09authored byWei-Ting Lu, Lykourgos-Panagiotis Zalmas, Chris Bailey, James RM Black, Carlos Martinez-Ruiz, Oriol Pich, Francisco Gimeno-Valiente, Ieva Usaite, Alastair Magness, Kerstin Thol, Thomas A Webber, Ming Jiang, Rebecca E Saunders, Yun-Hsin Liu, Dhruva Biswas, Esther O Ige, Birgit Aerne, Eva Grönroos, Subramanian Venkatesan, Georgia Stavrou, Takahiro Karasaki, Maise Al Bakir, Matthew Renshaw, Hang Xu, Deborah Schneider-Luftman, Natasha Sharma, Laura Tovini, TRACERx Consortium, Mariam Jamal-Hanjani, Sarah E McClelland, Kevin Litchfield, Nicolai J Birkbak, Michael Howell, Nicolas Tapon, Kasper Fugger, Nicholas McGranahan, Jiri Bartek, Nnennaya Kanu, Charles Swanton
Chromosomal instability (CIN) is common in solid tumours and fuels evolutionary adaptation and poor prognosis by increasing intratumour heterogeneity. Systematic characterization of driver events in the TRACERx non-small-cell lung cancer (NSCLC) cohort identified that genetic alterations in six genes, including FAT1, result in homologous recombination (HR) repair deficiencies and CIN. Using orthogonal genetic and experimental approaches, we demonstrate that FAT1 alterations are positively selected before genome doubling and associated with HR deficiency. FAT1 ablation causes persistent replication stress, an elevated mitotic failure rate, nuclear deformation and elevated structural CIN, including chromosome translocations and radial chromosomes. FAT1 loss contributes to whole-genome doubling (a form of numerical CIN) through the dysregulation of YAP1. Co-depletion of YAP1 partially rescues numerical CIN caused by FAT1 loss but does not relieve HR deficiencies, nor structural CIN. Importantly, overexpression of constitutively active YAP15SA is sufficient to induce numerical CIN. Taken together, we show that FAT1 loss in NSCLC attenuates HR and exacerbates CIN through two distinct downstream mechanisms, leading to increased tumour heterogeneity.
Funding
Crick (Grant ID: CC2138, Grant title: Tapon CC2138)
Crick (Grant ID: CC2041, Grant title: Swanton CC2041)
Crick (Grant ID: CC1069, Grant title: STP Light Microscopy)
Crick (Grant ID: CC1071, Grant title: STP High Throughput Screening)
Crick (Grant ID: CC1107, Grant title: STP Bioinformatics & Biostatistics)
European Research Council (Grant ID: 617844 - THESEUS, Grant title: ERC 617844 - THESEUS)
European Research Council (Grant ID: 835297 - PROTEUS, Grant title: ERC 835297 - PROTEUS)
Novo Nordisk UK Research Foundation (Grant ID: NNF15OC0016584, Grant title: NovoNordisk Foundation 16584)