Environment
Loss of the Y chromosome drives epigenetic and transcriptomic plasticity in lung adenocarcinoma
Key Points
Loss of the Y chromosome (LOY) is associated with poor survival across multiple solid tumors, yet the underlying molecular mechanisms remain poorly understood. Here, we identify LOY as a central driver of lineage plasticity and epigenetic heterogeneity in lung adenocarcinoma. Integrating multi-omic profiling of primary samples with isogenic cellular models, we show that LOY triggers epithelial-to-mesenchymal transition (EMT).
Loss of the Y chromosome (LOY) is associated with poor survival across multiple solid tumors, yet the underlying molecular mechanisms remain poorly understood. Here, we identify LOY as a central driver of lineage plasticity and epigenetic heterogeneity in lung adenocarcinoma. Integrating multi-omic profiling of primary samples with isogenic cellular models, we show that LOY triggers epithelial-to-mesenchymal transition (EMT). Mechanistically, LOY causes haploinsufficiency of dosage-sensitive regulators, leading to widespread DNA hypomethylation at EMT gene promoters, including THY1 and LOX. Single-cell multi-omic analyses demonstrate that LOY induces epigenetic heterogeneity, destabilizes the chromatin landscape, and increases lineage plasticity, enabling rapid cellular adaptation to metabolic and genotoxic stress. Moreover, LOY-induced plasticity facilitates tumor engraftment and metastatic dissemination in vivo. These findings establish Y-linked gene dosage as a critical guardian of epigenetic stability, providing a mechanistic rationale for how its loss amplifies phenotypic diversity and lineage plasticity, ultimately driving adverse clinical outcomes in LOY patients.