ETV1 is a lineage-specific survival factor in GIST and cooperates with KIT in oncogenesis
Abstract
Gastrointestinal stromal tumour (GIST) is the most common human sarcoma and is primarily defined by activating mutations in the KIT or PDGFRA receptor tyrosine kinases1,2. KIT is highly expressed in interstitial cells of Cajal (ICCs)—the presumed cell of origin for GIST—as well as in hematopoietic stem cells, melanocytes, mast cells and germ cells2,3. Yet, families harbouring germline activating KIT mutations and mice with knock-in Kit mutations almost exclusively develop ICC hyperplasia and GIST4–7, suggesting that the cellular context is important for KIT to mediated oncogenesis. Here we show that the ETS family member ETV1 is highly expressed in the subtypes of ICCs sensitive to oncogenic KIT mediated transformation8, and is required for their development. In addition, ETV1 is universally highly expressed in GISTs and is required for growth of imatinib-sensitive and resistant GIST cell lines. Transcriptome profiling and global analyses of ETV1-binding sites suggest that ETV1 is a master regulator of an ICC-GIST-specific transcription network mainly through enhancer binding. The ETV1 transcriptional program is further regulated by activated KIT, which prolongs ETV1 protein stability and cooperates with ETV1 to promote tumourigenesis. We propose that GIST arises from ICCs with high levels of endogenous ETV1 expression that, when coupled with an activating KIT mutation, drives an oncogenic ETS transcription program. This differs from other ETS-dependent tumours such as prostate cancer, melanoma, and Ewing sarcoma where genomic translocation or amplification drives aberrant ETS expression9–11 and represents a novel mechanism of oncogenic transcription factor activation.
Reasoning that transcription factors are likely to play critical roles in defining the cellular context, we utilized three expression datasets12,13 to search for GIST specific genes that might provide new molecular insights. We identified an eleven-gene signature exclusively associated with GIST in all three datasets that included the ETS family transcription factor ETV1 (Fig. 1a, Supplementary Table 1). Examination of individual tumour samples revealed that ETV1 is highly expressed in all GISTs and at significantly higher levels than any other tumour type (Fig. 1b, Supplementary Fig. 1). ETV1 was of immediate interest since ETS family transcription factors are well established oncogenes in Ewing sarcoma, melanoma, and prostate cancer9–11.
Next, we assessed mRNA and protein levels of ETV1 in GIST and other sarcomas in clinical samples, GIST cell lines (imatinib-resistant GIST48 and imatinib-sensitive GIST882), the U2OS osteosarcoma cell line, and the LNCaP prostate cancer cell line known to overexpress ETV1 due to translocation14 (Fig. 1c, d). ETV1 mRNA and protein were highly and exclusively expressed in all GISTs and GIST cell lines, and in LNCaP cells. As expected, KIT mRNA and protein were highly expressed in all GIST tumours and GIST cell lines, but not in other sarcomas or non-GIST cell lines, and phospho-KIT was only seen in GIST samples with activating KIT mutations. Four additional GIST samples amenable to immunohistochemical analysis all showed strong nuclear ETV1 staining whereas a leiomyosarcoma control sample did not (Supplementary Fig. 2). These data show that ETV1 is universally highly expressed in all GISTs both at transcript and protein levels.
To explore the requirement of ETV1 in GIST pathogenesis, we performed RNAi experiments using two ETV1-specific hairpins validated for both protein and mRNA suppression (Supplementary Fig. 3a). Infection with either hairpin resulted in growth inhibition of both GIST cell lines, but did not affect the growth of U2OS cells. Consistent with the level of ETV1 knockdown, ETV1sh2 was more growth suppressive than ETV1sh1 in both GIST cell lines (Fig. 1e). Cell cycle analysis showed that ETV1 knockdown resulted in both decreased cell cycle progression and increased apoptosis (Supplementary Fig. 3b). ETV1 knockdown also impaired the tumourigenicity of GIST882 cells in SCID mouse xenografts, and those tumours that did grow had escaped ETV1suppression (Fig. 1f). Collectively, these observations indicate that ETV1 is required for GIST growth and survival.
Next, we addressed the mode of high ETV1 expression in GIST. FISH on 4 GIST samples and 2 GIST cell lines showed no evidence of amplification or “breakaway” between the 3′ and 5′ ends of ETV1 locus. qRT-PCR showed no evidence of differential exon expression, which is expected with ETV1 translocation (Supplementary Fig. 4). Furthermore, no focal ETV1 amplification was found in 40 GIST tumours and 6 GIST cell lines in a recent 250K SNP array study15. The fact that high levels of ETV1 expression are consistently observed in the absence of obvious genomic alterations raises the possibility that the ICCs that give rise to GIST may endogenously express ETV1.
The musculature of the GI tract is organized into two principal layers—the inner circular muscle (CM) layer beneath the mucosa (M) and the outer longitudinal muscle (LM) layer16. In the large intestine, myenteric ICCs (ICC-MY) form a network between the CM and LM layers surrounding the neuronal myenteric plexus, intramuscular ICCs (ICC-IM) are singly dispersed in the CM, and submucosal ICCs (ICC-SMP) form network surrounding the submucosal plexus (Fig. 2a). In the small intestine, ICC-IMs and ICC-SMPs are absent and ICC-DMPs form a network around the deep muscular plexus in the CM close to the mucosa (Supplementary Fig. 5a). All four ICC subtypes are identified by positive membrane expression of Kit16 (Fig. 2b and Supplementary Fig. 5b). In the large intestine, ICC-MYs and ICC-IMs but not ICC-SMPs stain with nuclear Etv1 (Fig. 2b). In the small intestine, ICC-MYs but not ICC-DMPs stain with nuclear Etv1 (Supplementary Fig. 5b). This finding is further supported by our analysis of a published ICC expression dataset from mouse small intestine17 showing that Etv1 is only highly expressed in ICC-MYs (Supplementary Fig. 5c). Notably, in the KitΔ558 mutant mice only ICC-MY and ICC-IM develop hyperplasia while ICC-SMP and ICC-DMP do not8. These data suggest that ETV1 is a lineage-specific transcription factor for the ICCs that give rise to GIST.
We therefore asked if Etv1 is required for the normal development of ICCs by examining the GI tracts of Etv1−/− mice18. Cross section and reconstructed whole-mount images from Etv1−/− mice showed significant loss of Kit-positive ICC-IMs and ICC-MYs in the large intestine (Fig. 2c–d, Supplementary Fig. 9, Supplementary Movies 1–2), small intestine, stomach, and cecum (Supplementary Figs. 6–9, Supplementary Movies 3–8). In contrast, ICC-DMPs and ICC-SMPs in the small and large intestine respectively were preserved, consistent with absent Etv1 expression in these ICC subtypes. These results were confirmed with a second ICC marker Ano119 (Supplementary Fig. 10). Immunostaining with the neuronal marker PGP9.5 confirmed the integrity of the myenteric plexus in Etv1−/− mice (Fig. 2c, Supplemental Figs. 6–8, 11). Collectively, these data indicate that Etv1 is selectively required for development of ICC-MY and ICC-IM and, by implication, a lineage-specific survival factor for the ICC-GIST lineage.
To identify ETV1 target genes in GIST, we analyzed the effect of shRNA-mediated ETV1 suppression on the transcriptomes of GIST48 and GIST882 cells. The overlap of genes perturbed by both ETV1-specific hairpins and across both cell lines was highly statistically significant, suggesting that ETV1 regulates a core set of genes in GIST (Supplementary Fig. 12). To minimize cell line-specific and off-target effects, we generated a ranked gene list based on the average change in gene expression induced by the two ETV1-specific hairpins in both GIST cell lines (Fig. 3a, b). We independently confirmed downregulation of 5 of these genes using real-time RT-PCR (Supplementary Fig. 13). Among the 48 genes suppressed >1.7-fold by ETV1 knockdown, 32 were expressed at higher levels in human GIST samples relative to other tumour types in the ExpO expression dataset (Fig. 3b). We performed gene set enrichment analysis (GSEA)20 of the “shETV1” ranked list using >3,000 gene sets in the Molecular Signature Database along with 5 custom gene sets defined by GIST-signature genes from the Segal, Nielsen, and ExpO datasets and by ICC-MY- and ICC-DMP-signature genes (Supplementary Table 1). All three GIST sets along with the ICC-MY set were among the most negatively enriched gene sets while the ICC-DMP set was not (Fig. 3c, Supplementary Fig. 14, and Supplementary Table 2). These data suggest that ETV1 is a master regulator of a transcriptional program conserved in ICC-IM/MYs and GISTs.
To define the direct transcriptional targets of ETV1 in GIST, we performed genome-wide analyses of ETV1-binding sites using ChIP-Seq in GIST48 cells. We identified 14,741 ETV1-binding sites (ETV1 peaks) which are enriched in promoter regions (Fig. 3d). Motif analysis of the peaks identified the ETS core consensus motif, GGAA, in ~90% of peaks (Fig. 3f). Integrative analyses of the ETV1 ChIP-Seq data with the transcriptomes from shRNA-mediated ETV1 suppression in GIST cells showed that 38 of the top 48 shETV1 downregulated genes contain ETV1 peaks (Fig. 3b, e, Supplementary Fig. 15). Analysis of genes with 1.4-fold change by shETV1 knockdown revealed that both shETV1 upregulated and shETV1 downregulated genes are enriched for ETV1 peaks. Furthermore, enhancer binding and in particular enhancer and promoter binding is highly predicative of transcriptional activation by ETV1 (Fig. 3h). Since enhancers are in general cell-lineage specific21,22, our data suggest that these ICC-GIST-lineage specific genes are likely directly regulated by ETV1 binding to their enhancer regulatory elements.
The dual requirement of KIT and ETV1 in normal ICC development and GIST survival raise the possibility that KIT and ETV1 cooperate in GIST oncogenesis. Inhibition of KIT signalling by imatinib in imatinib-sensitive GIST882 cells resulted in rapid loss of ETV1 protein, without significant effect on ETV1 mRNA levels (Fig. 4a, b, Supplementary Fig. 16). Similar results were observed with the MEK inhibitor PD325901. This loss of ETV1 protein was faster than the natural degradation rate, as revealed by cyclohexamide experiments to inhibit protein synthesis, and was rescued from proteosomal degradation by MG132 (Fig. 4b). Therefore, KIT-MEK signalling stabilizes ETV1 protein. Consistent with this KIT-MEK-ETV1 signalling pathway model, the overlap between genes transcriptionally altered by imatinib treatment (KIT-regulated) and by ETV1 knockdown in GIST882 cells is highly significant (Fig. 4c). Furthermore, these ETV1 transcriptional targets preferentially contain ETV1 enhancer peaks (Fig. 4d), indicating that KIT signalling influences the ETV1 transcriptional output of the tissue and lineage-specific genes in GIST.
Having established a signalling pathway from KIT to ETV1, we explored their potential cooperativity in tumourigenesis by expressing ETV1, wild-type KIT, KIT harbouring a common GIST mutation (KITΔ560) and control vectors in combination in NIH3T3 cells. KIT-dependent stabilization of ETV1 protein was recapitulated in this system (Fig. 4e). In anchorage independent colony formation assays, ETV1 significantly increased the number and size of colonies in KITΔ560 expressing cells but was insufficient to confer anchorage-independent growth on its own (Supplementary Fig. 17). Furthermore, KITΔ560 and ETV1 strongly cooperated in conferring tumourigenic growth in SCID mice (Fig. 4f, g).
Taken together, these findings establish an oncogenic role for ETV1 in GIST that differs from classical models of ETS-driven malignancies where structural alterations (e.g., TMPRSS2-ETV1 translocation in prostate cancer, ETV1 amplification in melanoma) lead to aberrant expression and promote tumourigenesis9,11. Rather, ETV1 expression in GIST is inherited from ICC-MY/IM cells, where ETV1 is also a survival factor. We further established that KIT activity, through MEK, stabilizes ETV1, providing a mechanism for KIT-ETV1 cooperativity (Fig. 4h). These observations provide an explanation for why patients and mice with germline activating KIT mutations develop neoplasia in only the ICC-MY/IM lineage. While the mechanism of ETV1-mediated oncogenesis in GIST differs from other ETS-driven cancers, we anticipate that the ETV1-dependent transcriptional program defined here may serve as a valuable resource for further understanding of other ETV1- and other ETS-driven transcriptional programs in various cellular contexts such as prostate cancer.
The fact that ETV1 is universally highly expressed in all GISTs makes it immediately useful as a candidate diagnostic biomarker, since the current standard of KIT immunoreactivity is negative in about 5% of all GISTs23. While transcription factors has classically been considered “undruggable”, reports of successful inhibition of the NOTCH transcription factor complex and AR activity by blocking coactivator binding have challenged this paradigm24,25. Due to established requirements of ETV1 in subsets of prostate cancer and melanoma, efforts to find ETV1 inhibitors are underway and may yield novel therapeutic agents for imatinib-resistant GIST.
Methods Summary
Expression data mining, microarray analysis and ChIP-Seq
All mined datasets were downloaded Gene Expression Omnibus (GSE2109, GSE7809, GSE2719, GSE3443, GSE8167, GSE17743) and were analyzed by Oncomine™ or using Genespring 10. GIST-signature genes from three datasets containing both GIST and non-GIST malignancies met the following two criteria: 1) q<0.05, and 2) a Z-score expression difference >1.5 between GIST and non-GIST tumours. Expression profiling of GIST cell lines with different shRNA conditions was performed in duplicate on Illumina Human HT-12 array. GSEA was performed using MSigDB C2, MSigDB C4, and the GIST and ICC signature gene sets. For ChIP-Seq, sheared chromatin enriched by ETV1 IP was sequenced on Solexa Genome Analyzer, aligned using ELAND alignment software. Peaks were identified by MACS using input DNA as control using a FDR <1%.
Materials
GIST48 and GIST882 cells were established in the Fletcher laboratory (DFCI). All other cells were obtained from ATCC. Etv1−/− mice, with targeted deletion of the ETS domain, was obtained from the Jessell laboratory (Columbia) and CB17-SCID mice was from Taconic. Antibody sources are: ETV1, ANO1, PGP9.5 (Abcam), KIT for WB, P-Tyr703-KIT (Cell Signaling), P-Tyr204-ERK, GAPDH (Santa Cruz), and anti-mouse Kit for IF (clone ACK2, E-Biosciences).
Supplementary Material
Footnotes
Author Information
All microarray and ChIP-Seq data are available from the Gene Expression Omnibus database (http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/geo) under accession GSE22852.
The authors declare no competing financial interests.
Acknowledgments
This work is supported in part by the NCI (K08CA140946, YC), (5F32CA130372, PC), (CA47179, CRA, RGM), (CA148260, RGM), US NIMH (R21MH087840, DZ), NCI-ASCO Cancer Foundation Clinical Investigator Team Leadership Supplemental Award (RGM), ASCO YIA (PC), Doris Duke (CLS), Charles H Revson (YC), the Charles A. Dana (YC) Foundations, ACS MRSG CCE-106841 (CRA), P01CA47179 (CRA, RGM), Life Raft Group (CRA), GIST Cancer Research Fund (CRA), Shuman Family Fund for GIST Research (CRA, RGM), Cycle for Survival (RGM) and Startup Funds from Albert Einstein College of Medicine (DZ). We thank International Genomics Consortium (IGC) for generating ExpO data. We thank G. Wang, P. Iaquinta, and H. Hieronymus for discussions, and especially T. M. Jessell and J. N. Betley for providing and breeding Etv1−/− mice.
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