Divergent lineage trajectories and genetic landscapes in human gastric intestinal metaplasia organoids associated with early neoplastic progression

Sarah S.K. Yue, Yin Tong, Hoi Cheong Siu, Siu Lun Ho, Simon Y.K. Law, Wai Yin Tsui, Dessy Chan, Yuanhua Huang, Annie S.Y. Chan, Shui Wa Yun, Ho Sang Hui, Jee Eun Choi, Matthew S.S. Hsu, Frank P.L. Lai, April S. Chan, Siu Tsan Yuen, Hans Clevers, Suet Yi Leung*, Helen H.N. Yan*

*Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journalArticleAcademicpeer-review

Abstract

Background: Gastric intestinal metaplasia (IM) is a precancerous stage spanning a morphological spectrum that is poorly represented by human cell line models. Objective: We aim to establish and characterise human IM cell models to better understand IM progression along the cancer spectrum. Design: A large human gastric IM organoid (IMO) cohort (n=28), their clonal derivatives and normal gastric organoids (n=42) for comparison were established. Comprehensive multi-omics profiling and functional characterisation were performed. Results: Single-cell transcriptomes revealed IMO cells spanning a spectrum from hybrid gastric/intestinal to advanced intestinal differentiation. Their lineage trajectories connected different cycling and quiescent stem and progenitors, highlighting differences in gastric to IM transition and the potential origin of IM from STMN1 cycling isthmus stem cells. Hybrid IMOs showed impaired differentiation potential, high lineage plasticity beyond gastric or intestinal fates and reactivation of a fetal gene programme. Cell populations in gastric IM and cancer tissues were highly similar to those derived from IMOs and exhibited a fetal signature. Genomically, IMOs showed elevated mutation burden, frequent chromosome 20 gain and epigenetic deregulation of many intestinal and gastric genes. Functionally, IMOs were FGF10 independent and showed downregulated FGFR2. Several IMOs exhibited a cell-matrix adhesion independent subpopulation that displayed chromosome 20 gain but lacked key cancer driver mutations, potentially representing the earliest neoplastic precursor of IM-induced gastric cancer. Conclusions: Overall, our IMO biobank captured the heterogeneous nature of IM, revealing mechanistic insights on IM pathogenesis and progression, offering an ideal platform for studying early gastric neoplastic transformation and chemoprevention.

Original languageEnglish
Article number332594
Pages (from-to)522-538
Number of pages17
JournalGut
Volume74
Issue number4
Early online date20 Nov 2024
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 6 Mar 2025

Keywords

  • gastric cancer
  • gastric intestinal metaplasia
  • organoid model

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