Teng Yu-Hsiang, Appiah Bismark, Andrieux Geoffroy, Schrempp Monika, Rose Katja, Hofmann Angelika Susanna, Ku Manching, Beyes Sven, Boerries Melanie, Hecht Andreas
Institute of Molecular Medicine and Cell Research, Faculty of Medicine, University of Freiburg, Freiburg, Germany.
Faculty of Biology, University of Freiburg, Freiburg, Germany.
Oncogenesis. 2025 May 20;14(1):17. doi: 10.1038/s41389-025-00560-7.
Cancer cells infiltrating surrounding tissue frequently undergo partial epithelial-mesenchymal transitions (pEMT) and employ a collective mode of invasion. How these phenotypic traits are regulated and interconnected remains underexplored. Here, we used intestinal organoids with colorectal cancer (CRC) driver mutations as model system to investigate the mechanistic basis of TGF-β1-induced pEMT and collective invasion. By scRNA-seq we identified multiple cell subpopulations representing a broad pEMT spectrum, where the most advanced pEMT state correlated with the transcriptional profiles of leader cells in collective invasion and a poor prognosis mesenchymal subtype of human CRC. Bioinformatic analyses pinpointed Sox11 as a transcription factor gene whose expression peaked in the potential leader/pEMT cells. Immunofluorescence staining confirmed Sox11 expression in cells at the invasive front of TGF-β1-treated organoids. Loss-of-function and overexpression experiments showed that Sox11 is necessary, albeit not sufficient, for TGF-β1-induced pEMT and collective invasion. In human CRC samples, elevated SOX11 expression was associated with advanced tumor stages and worse prognosis. Unexpectedly, aside from orchestrating the organoid response to TGF-β1, Sox11 controlled expression of genes related to normal gut function and tumor suppression. Apparently, Sox11 is embedded in several distinct gene regulatory circuits, contributing to intestinal tissue homeostasis, tumor suppression, and TGF-β-mediated cancer cell invasion.