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Integrated stress response couples mitochondrial fitness with lineage reprogramming to drive cancer evolution.

Created on 16 Jun 2026

Authors

Shiqi Diao, Jia Yi Zou, Shuo Wang, Jason E Chan, Roderik M Kortlever, Nicolas Poulain, Nour Ghaddar, Hyungdong Kim, Gerard I Evan, Constantinos Koumenis, Maria Hatzoglou, Peter Walter, Nahum Sonenberg, John Le Quesne, Tuomas Tammela, Antonis E Koromilas

Published in

Nature cell biology. Jun 15, 2026. Epub Jun 15, 2026.

Abstract

Tumour progression towards dedifferentiated cell clusters plays a critical role in intratumour heterogeneity and therapy resistance. While tumour microenvironmental stress has been implicated, the underlying mechanisms remain poorly defined. Using mouse models of lung adenocarcinoma, we demonstrate that activation of the integrated stress response (ISR)-marked by phosphorylation of eIF2 (p-eIF2) and ATF4 induction-drives tumour heterogeneity. ISR activation facilitates the emergence of high-plasticity, undifferentiated and pre-epithelial-to-mesenchymal transition clusters characterized by elevated ATF4 and MYC activity. This process is MYC dependent and involves ISR-mediated repression of NKX2-1, a key determinant of alveolar identity, and induction of CHCHD10, a regulator of mitochondrial integrity and metabolic fitness. Disruption of the p-eIF2-ATF4 axis induces mitochondrial dysfunction, limits dedifferentiation and suppresses tumour growth. In human lung adenocarcinoma, ISR-driven dedifferentiation correlates with advanced disease and poor prognosis, identifying the ISR as a central driver of lineage reprogramming and metabolic fitness in tumour progression.

PMID:
42298057
Bibliographic data and abstract were imported from PubMed on 16 Jun 2026.

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