Changes in the Transcriptome and Synthetic Lethal Dependencies Following KRAS Mutant Expression Reveal Profound Tissue-Specificity

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Abstract

Oncogenic KRAS mutations exhibit a striking tissue-restricted tropism, occurring with high frequency in pancreatic, colorectal, and lung adenocarcinomas while remaining rare in other lineages. The molecular basis for why these specific tissues are uniquely permissive to KRAS transformation, and how this context shapes therapeutic vulnerabilities, remains poorly defined. Here, we utilized CRISPR-mediated genome engineering to generate endogenous, conditional KRAS-mutant isogenic cell line models across three primary permissive lineages (lung, colon, and pancreas) and the non-permissive breast lineage. Integrated genome-wide CRISPR fitness screens and comparative transcriptome analyses revealed that KRAS-driven synthetic lethal (SL) dependencies are profoundly shaped by their tissue of origin. Strikingly, we observed minimal overlap in SL hits across lineages, with only three genes shared among the permissive lines, suggesting that the KRAS oncogene operates through divergent, context-specific genetic networks. Mechanistically, we show that KRAS activation induces a universal MYC-driven metabolic signature, but the specific machinery required to sustain this state is lineage-restricted. We identified a dependency on the diphthamide synthesis pathway to maintain translational fidelity amidst a KRAS-induced hyper-translational state. These findings demonstrate that even when driven by the same oncogene, tumors exhibit distinct regulatory landscapes and unique genetic vulnerabilities. Our results provide a framework for developing lineage-aware therapeutic strategies, moving beyond universal KRAS inhibition toward targeted interventions tailored to a tumor’s specific tissue context.

SIGNIFICANCE STATEMENT

While KRAS mutations drive a significant portion of human malignancies, their prevalence is strikingly restricted to specific lineages, namely pancreatic, colorectal, and lung tissues. This tissue-restricted tropism suggests that oncogenic KRAS does not operate in a vacuum but requires a permissive, tissue-specific molecular landscape to sustain tumorigenesis. By integrating comparative transcriptome analyses with functional genomics across four isogenic lineages, we demonstrate that KRAS synthetic lethal dependencies are not universal but are hardwired to the cell of origin. This work establishes a framework for tissue lineage-aware oncology, shifting treatment paradigms from targeting the KRAS mutation alone to targeting the specific genetic networks, defined by the tissue of origin, that sustain KRAS-driven growth.

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