Litcius/Paper detail

AP-1 transcription factor network explains diverse patterns of cellular plasticity in melanoma cells

Natacha Comandante-Lou, Douglas G. Baumann, Mohammad Fallahi‐Sichani

2022Cell Reports52 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Cellular plasticity associated with fluctuations in transcriptional programs allows individual cells in a tumor to adopt heterogeneous differentiation states and switch phenotype during their adaptive responses to therapies. Despite increasing knowledge of such transcriptional programs, the molecular basis of cellular plasticity remains poorly understood. Here, we combine multiplexed transcriptional and protein measurements at population and single-cell levels with multivariate statistical modeling to show that the state of AP-1 transcription factor network plays a unifying role in explaining diverse patterns of plasticity in melanoma. We find that a regulated balance among AP-1 factors cJUN, JUND, FRA2, FRA1, and cFOS determines the intrinsic diversity of differentiation states and adaptive responses to MAPK inhibitors in melanoma cells. Perturbing this balance through genetic depletion of specific AP-1 proteins, or by MAPK inhibitors, shifts cellular heterogeneity in a predictable fashion. Thus, AP-1 may serve as a critical node for manipulating cellular plasticity with potential therapeutic implications.

Topics & Concepts

BiologyTranscription factorPhenotypeCell biologyMAPK/ERK pathwayPopulationComputational biologyNeuroscienceGeneticsSignal transductionGeneMedicineEnvironmental healthSingle-cell and spatial transcriptomicsCell Image Analysis TechniquesGene Regulatory Network Analysis