Expression patterns and prognostic relevance of subtype-specific transcription factors
in surgically resected small cell lung cancer: an international multicenter study
The tissue distribution and prognostic relevance of subtype-specific proteins (ASCL1,
NEUROD1, POU2F3, YAP1) present an evolving area of research in small cell lung cancer
(SCLC). The expression of subtype-specific transcription factors and P53 and RB1 proteins
were measured by immunohistochemistry (IHC) in 386 surgically resected SCLC samples.
Correlations between subtype-specific proteins and in vitro efficacy of various therapeutic
agents were investigated by proteomics and cell viability assays in 26 human SCLC
cell lines. Besides SCLC-A (ASCL1-dominant), SCLC-AN (combined ASCL1/NEUROD1), SCLC-N
(NEUROD1-dominant) and SCLC-P (POU2F3-dominant), IHC and cluster analyses identified
a quadruple-negative SCLC subtype (SCLC-QN). No unique YAP1-subtype was found. The
highest overall survival rates were associated with non-neuroendocrine subtypes (SCLC-P
and SCLC-QN) and the lowest with neuroendocrine subtypes (SCLC-A, SCLC-N, SCLC-AN).
In univariate analyses, high ASCL1 expression was associated with poor prognosis and
high POU2F3 expression with good prognosis. Notably, high ASCL1 expression influenced
survival outcomes independently of other variables in a multivariate model. High POU2F3
and YAP1 protein abundances correlated with sensitivity and resistance to standard-of-care
chemotherapeutics, respectively. Specific correlation patterns were also found between
the efficacy of targeted agents and subtype-specific protein abundances. In conclusion,
we have investigated the clinicopathological relevance of SCLC molecular subtypes
in a large cohort of surgically resected specimens. Differential IHC expression of
ASCL1, NEUROD1 and POU2F3 defines SCLC subtypes. No YAP1-subtype can be distinguished
by IHC. High POU2F3 expression is associated with improved survival in a univariate
analysis, whereas elevated ASCL1 expression is an independent negative prognosticator.
Proteomic and cell viability assays of human SCLC cell lines reveal distinct vulnerability
profiles defined by transcription regulators. This article is protected by copyright.
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