DNA methylation‐associated allelic inactivation regulates Keratin 19 gene expression during pancreatic development and carcinogenesis

Author:

Krüger Jana1ORCID,Fischer Anja2ORCID,Breunig Markus1ORCID,Allgöwer Chantal1,Schulte Lucas3,Merkle Jessica4,Mulaw Medhanie A5,Okeke Nnamdi2,Melzer Michael K16ORCID,Morgenstern Clara1ORCID,Azoitei Ninel1,Seufferlein Thomas7,Barth Thomas FE8,Siebert Reiner2,Hohwieler Meike1ORCID,Kleger Alexander134ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Institute of Molecular Oncology and Stem Cell Biology Ulm University Hospital Ulm Germany

2. Institute of Human Genetics Ulm University & Ulm University Hospital Ulm Germany

3. Division of Interdisciplinary Pancreatology, Department of Internal Medicine I Ulm University Hospital Ulm Germany

4. Organoid Core Facility Ulm University Ulm Germany

5. Unit for Single‐cell Genomics, Medical Faculty Ulm University Ulm Germany

6. Department of Urology Ulm University Hospital Ulm Germany

7. Department of Internal Medicine I Ulm University Hospital Ulm Germany

8. Department of Pathology Ulm University Hospital Ulm Germany

Abstract

AbstractWithin the pancreas, Keratin 19 (KRT19) labels the ductal lineage and is a determinant of pancreatic ductal adenocarcinoma (PDAC). To investigate KRT19 expression dynamics, we developed a human pluripotent stem cell (PSC)‐based KRT19mCherry reporter system in different genetic backgrounds to monitor KRT19 expression from its endogenous gene locus. A differentiation protocol to generate mature pancreatic duct‐like organoids was applied. While KRT19/mCherry expression became evident at the early endoderm stage, mCherry signal was present in nearly all cells at the pancreatic endoderm (PE) and pancreatic progenitor (PP) stages. Interestingly, despite homogenous KRT19 expression, mCherry positivity dropped to 50% after ductal maturation, indicating a permanent switch from biallelic to monoallelic expression. DNA methylation profiling separated the distinct differentiation intermediates, with site‐specific DNA methylation patterns occurring at the KRT19 locus during ductal maturation. Accordingly, the monoallelic switch was partially reverted upon treatment with a DNA‐methyltransferase inhibitor. In human PDAC cohorts, high KRT19 levels correlate with low locus methylation and decreased survival. At the same time, activation of oncogenic KRASG12D signalling in our reporter system reversed monoallelic back to biallelic KRT19 expression in pancreatic duct‐like organoids. Allelic reactivation was also detected in single‐cell transcriptomes of human PDACs, which further revealed a positive correlation between KRT19 and KRAS expression. Accordingly, KRAS mutant PDACs had higher KRT19 mRNA but lower KRT19 gene locus DNA methylation than wildtype counterparts. KRT19 protein was additionally detected in plasma of PDAC patients, with higher concentrations correlating with shorter progression‐free survival in gemcitabine/nabPaclitaxel‐treated and opposing trends in FOLFIRINOX‐treated patients. Apart from being an important pancreatic ductal lineage marker, KRT19 appears tightly controlled via a switch from biallelic to monoallelic expression during ductal lineage entry and is aberrantly expressed after oncogenic KRASG12D expression, indicating a role in PDAC development and malignancy. Soluble KRT19 might serve as a relevant biomarker to stratify treatment. © 2023 The Authors. The Journal of Pathology published by John Wiley & Sons Ltd on behalf of The Pathological Society of Great Britain and Ireland.

Funder

Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft

Deutsche Krebshilfe

International Graduate School in Molecular Medicine Ulm

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Pathology and Forensic Medicine

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