OAK

Early fibrotic niches establish tumour-permissive microenvironments

Metadata Downloads
Author(s)
Cardoso, Erik C.Lee, HyeyoungEngland, Frances J.Cho, HyunjinLu, RobinVarankar, Sagar S.Park, Moo SukRekhtman, NatashaKoo, Bon-KyoungSimons, Benjamin D.Choi, JinwookLee, Joo-Hyeon
Type
Article
Citation
NATURE, v.653, no.8113
Issued Date
2026-05
Abstract
Pathologic transformation represents a critical yet poorly defined window during which mutant epithelial stem cells actively construct the microenvironment that enables tumour initiation1,2. Here using integrated single-cell, spatial and functional analyses, we define the earliest multicellular events that licence this transition following oncogenic activation in the lung. KrasG12D-mutant alveolar type II cells rapidly adopt regenerative-like states that act as signalling hubs, orchestrating coordinated stromal and immune reprogramming while enhancing epithelial plasticity. Through secretion of amphiregulin, mutant epithelial cells activate EGFR signalling in adjacent fibroblasts, inducing a fibrotic, injury-like programme. Reprogrammed fibroblasts, in turn, expand and reprogramme alveolar macrophages, amplifying inflammatory signalling and reinforcing epithelial plasticity. These reciprocal interactions establish a self-sustaining epithelial-stromal-immune circuit that generates a tumour-permissive niche before malignant outgrowth. Disruption of the amphiregulin-EGFR axis prevents early niche formation and abrogates tumour initiation. Conservation of this programme in KRASG12D-inducible human alveolar organoids and early-stage lung adenocarcinoma tissues identifies epithelial-microenvironment communication as a therapeutically actionable vulnerability and suggests that intercepting niche formation may prevent progression to treatment-resistant disease.
Publisher
NATURE PORTFOLIO
ISSN
0028-0836
DOI
10.1038/s41586-026-10399-6
URI
https://scholar.gist.ac.kr/handle/local/34237
공개 및 라이선스
  • 공개 구분공개
파일 목록
  • 관련 파일이 존재하지 않습니다.

Items in Repository are protected by copyright, with all rights reserved, unless otherwise indicated.