Investigator

Kunishige Onuma

Program-Specific Assistant Professor · Kyoto University , Department of Clinical Bio-resource Research and Development, Graduate School of Medicine

KOKunishige Onuma
Papers(2)
Polarity switching of…Clonal Origin and Lin…
Collaborators(7)
Masahiro InoueRoberto CoppoYoji KukitaAya NakajimaJumpei KondoJunzo HamanishiKikuya Kato
Institutions(2)
Kyoto UniversityOsaka International C…

Papers

Polarity switching of ovarian cancer cell clusters via SRC family kinase is involved in the peritoneal dissemination

AbstractPeritoneal dissemination is a predominant pattern of metastasis in patients with advanced ovarian cancer. Despite recent progress in the management strategy, peritoneal dissemination remains a determinant of poor ovarian cancer prognosis. Using various histological types of patient‐derived ovarian cancer organoids, the roles of the apicobasal polarity of ovarian cancer cell clusters in peritoneal dissemination were studied. First, it was found that both ovarian cancer tissues and ovarian organoids showed apicobasal polarity, where zonula occludens‐1 (ZO‐1) and integrin beta 4 (ITGB4) served as markers for apical and basal sides, respectively. The organoids in suspension culture, as a model of cancer cell cluster floating in ascites, showed apical‐out/basal‐in polarity status, while once embedded in extracellular matrix (ECM), the organoids switched their polarity to apical‐in/basal‐out. This polarity switch was accompanied by the SRC kinase family (SFK) phosphorylation and was inhibited by SFK inhibitors. SFK inhibitors abrogated the adherence of the organoids onto the ECM‐coated plastic surface. When the organoids were seeded on a mesothelial cell layer, they cleared and invaded mesothelial cells. In vivo, dasatinib, an SFK inhibitor, suppressed peritoneal dissemination of ovarian cancer organoids in immunodeficient mice. These results suggest SFK‐mediated polarity switching is involved in peritoneal metastasis. Polarity switching would be a potential therapeutic target for suppressing peritoneal dissemination in ovarian cancer.

Clonal Origin and Lineage Ambiguity in Mixed Neuroendocrine Carcinoma of the Uterine Cervix

Small-cell neuroendocrine carcinoma (SCNEC) of the cervix is a rare disease characterized by a high incidence of mixed tumors with other types of cancer. The mechanism underlying this mixed phenotype is not well understood. This study established a panel of organoid lines from patients with SCNEC of the cervix and ultimately focused on one line, which retained a mixed tumor phenotype, both in vitro and in vivo. Histologically, both organoids and xenograft tumors showed distinct differentiation into either SCNEC or adenocarcinoma in some regions and ambiguous differentiation in others. Tracking single cells indicated the existence of cells with bipotential differentiation toward SCNEC and adenocarcinomas. Single-cell transcriptional analysis identified three distinct clusters: SCNEC-like, adenocarcinoma-like, and a cluster lacking specific differentiation markers. The expression of neuroendocrine markers was enriched in the SCNEC-like cluster but not exclusively. Human papillomavirus 18 E6 was enriched in the SCNEC-like cluster, which showed higher proliferation and lower levels of the p53 pathway. After treatment with anticancer drugs, the expression of adenocarcinoma markers increased, whereas that of SCNEC decreased. Using a reporter system for keratin 19 expression, changes in the differentiation of each cell were shown to be associated with the shift in differentiation induced by drug treatment. These data suggest that mixed SCNEC/cervical tumors have a clonal origin and are characterized by an ambiguous and flexible differentiation state.

32Works
2Papers
7Collaborators

Positions

2021–

Program-Specific Assistant Professor

Kyoto University · Department of Clinical Bio-resource Research and Development, Graduate School of Medicine

2019–

Researcher

Kyoto University · Department of Clinical Bio-resource Research and Development, Graduate School of Medicine

2012–

Assistant Professor

Tottori University · Division of Pathological Biochemistry

2010–

Postodoctoral Fellow

National Cancer Center Japan · Division of Cancer Development System, Carcinogenesis Research Group

Country

JP

Keywords
Cancer cell clusterPolarity switchingOrganoidColorectal carcinomaMicropapillary carcinoma