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Author Correction: Mechanisms and clinical activity of an EGFR and HER2 exon 20-selective kinase inhibitor in non-small cell lung cancer
Robichaux, Jacqulyne P; Elamin, Yasir Y; Tan, Zhi; Carter, Brett W; Zhang, Shuxing; Liu, Shengwu; Li, Shuai; Chen, Ting; Poteete, Alissa; Estrada-Bernal, Adriana; Le, Anh T; Truini, Anna; Nilsson, Monique B; Sun, Huiying; Roarty, Emily; Goldberg, Sarah B; Brahmer, Julie R; Altan, Mehmet; Lu, Charles; Papadimitrakopoulou, Vassiliki; Politi, Katerina; Doebele, Robert C; Wong, Kwok-Kin; Heymach, John V
PMID: 39164519
ISSN: 1546-170x
CID: 5680652
Deconvolution of the tumor-educated platelet transcriptome reveals activated platelet and inflammatory cell transcript signatures
Karp, Jerome M; Modrek, Aram S; Ezhilarasan, Ravesanker; Zhang, Ze-Yan; Ding, Yingwen; Graciani, Melanie; Sahimi, Ali; Silvestro, Michele; Chen, Ting; Li, Shuai; Wong, Kwok-Kin; Ramkhelawon, Bhama; Bhat, Krishna Pl; Sulman, Erik P
Tumor-educated platelets (TEPs) are a potential method of liquid biopsy for the diagnosis and monitoring of cancer. However, the mechanism underlying tumor education of platelets is not known, and transcripts associated with TEPs are often not tumor-associated transcripts. We demonstrated that direct tumor transfer of transcripts to circulating platelets is an unlikely source of the TEP signal. We used CDSeq, a latent Dirichlet allocation algorithm, to deconvolute the TEP signal in blood samples from patients with glioblastoma. We demonstrated that a substantial proportion of transcripts in the platelet transcriptome are derived from nonplatelet cells, and the use of this algorithm allows the removal of contaminant transcripts. Furthermore, we used the results of this algorithm to demonstrate that TEPs represent a subset of more activated platelets, which also contain transcripts normally associated with nonplatelet inflammatory cells, suggesting that these inflammatory cells, possibly in the tumor microenvironment, transfer transcripts to platelets that are then found in circulation. Our analysis suggests a useful and efficient method of processing TEP transcriptomic data to enable the isolation of a unique TEP signal associated with specific tumors.
PMCID:11466191
PMID: 39190500
ISSN: 2379-3708
CID: 5705692
UPF1 deficiency enhances mitochondrial ROS which promotes an immunosuppressive microenvironment in pancreatic ductal adenocarcinoma
Su, Wenjuan; Kochen Rossi, Juan; Nuevo-Tapioles, Cristina; Chen, Ting; Kawaler, Emily; Branco, Cristina; Wong, Kwok-Kin; Simeone, Diane M; Gardner, Lawrence B; Philips, Mark R
Upstream frameshift 1 (UPF1) is an RNA helicase involved in a number of mRNA regulatory processes including nonsense-mediated decay. Mutations in the UPF1 locus that reduce its expression have been associated with adenosquamous carcinoma of the pancreas, a particularly aggressive form of the disease. To determine the effect of Upf1 suppression in a murine model of pancreatic adenocarcinoma, we silenced with shRNA Upf1 in cells derived from an autochthonous tumor in an LSL-KrasG12D/+; Trp53R172H/+; Pdx-1Cre/+ mouse (KPC) and orthotopically implanted these cells in the pancreas of C57BL/6 mice. Tumors derived from Upf1-deficient cells were markedly larger than those derived from control cells, a difference observed only in immunocompetent mice. The immune infiltrate of Upf1-deficient tumors was enriched in myeloid-derived suppressor cells (MDSCs) and depleted of CD8+ cells compared to control KPC tumors. Upf1-deficient KPC cells secreted inflammatory cytokines including G-CSF and CXCL2, known to recruit MDSCs. Cytokine secretion from Upf1-deficient KPC cells was induced by increased levels of mitochondrial reactive oxygen species (ROS), which in turn were due to an increase in complex I activity in the electron transport chain. Thus, Upf1 helicase deficiency leads to increased mitochondrial complex I activity which produces ROS that signals for cytokine release that drives immune suppression and enhanced tumor growth.
PMCID:11331118
PMID: 40591563
ISSN: 1091-6490
CID: 5887742
Acquired Cross-resistance in Small Cell Lung Cancer due to Extrachromosomal DNA Amplification of MYC paralogs
Pal Choudhuri, Shreoshi; Girard, Luc; Lim, Jun Yi Stanley; Wise, Jillian F; Freitas, Braeden; Yang, Di; Wong, Edmond; Hamilton, Seth; Chien, Victor D; Kim, Yoon Jung; Gilbreath, Collin; Zhong, Jun; Phat, Sarah; Myers, David T; Christensen, Camilla L; Mazloom-Farsibaf, Hanieh; Stanzione, Marcello; Wong, Kwok-Kin; Hung, Yin P; Farago, Anna F; Meador, Catherine B; Dyson, Nicholas J; Lawrence, Michael S; Wu, Sihan; Drapkin, Benjamin J
Small cell lung cancer (SCLC) presents as a highly chemosensitive malignancy but acquires cross-resistance after relapse. This transformation is nearly inevitable in patients but has been difficult to capture in laboratory models. Here, we present a pre-clinical system that recapitulates acquired cross-resistance, developed from 51 patient-derived xenograft (PDX) models. Each model was tested in vivo against three clinical regimens: cisplatin plus etoposide, olaparib plus temozolomide, and topotecan. These drug-response profiles captured hallmark clinical features of SCLC, such as the emergence of treatment-refractory disease after early relapse. For one patient, serial PDX models revealed that cross-resistance was acquired through MYC amplification on extrachromosomal DNA (ecDNA). Genomic and transcriptional profiles of the full PDX panel revealed that MYC paralog amplifications on ecDNAs were recurrent in relapsed cross-resistant SCLC, and this was corroborated in tumor biopsies from relapsed patients. We conclude that ecDNAs with MYC paralogs are recurrent drivers of cross-resistance in SCLC.
PMID: 38386926
ISSN: 2159-8290
CID: 5634462
Glutamine antagonist DRP-104 suppresses tumor growth and enhances response to checkpoint blockade in KEAP1 mutant lung cancer
Pillai, Ray; LeBoeuf, Sarah E; Hao, Yuan; New, Connie; Blum, Jenna L E; Rashidfarrokhi, Ali; Huang, Shih Ming; Bahamon, Christian; Wu, Warren L; Karadal-Ferrena, Burcu; Herrera, Alberto; Ivanova, Ellie; Cross, Michael; Bossowski, Jozef P; Ding, Hongyu; Hayashi, Makiko; Rajalingam, Sahith; Karakousi, Triantafyllia; Sayin, Volkan I; Khanna, Kamal M; Wong, Kwok-Kin; Wild, Robert; Tsirigos, Aristotelis; Poirier, John T; Rudin, Charles M; Davidson, Shawn M; Koralov, Sergei B; Papagiannakopoulos, Thales
Loss-of-function mutations in KEAP1 frequently occur in lung cancer and are associated with poor prognosis and resistance to standard of care treatment, highlighting the need for the development of targeted therapies. We previously showed that KEAP1 mutant tumors consume glutamine to support the metabolic rewiring associated with NRF2-dependent antioxidant production. Here, using preclinical patient-derived xenograft models and antigenic orthotopic lung cancer models, we show that the glutamine antagonist prodrug DRP-104 impairs the growth of KEAP1 mutant tumors. We find that DRP-104 suppresses KEAP1 mutant tumors by inhibiting glutamine-dependent nucleotide synthesis and promoting antitumor T cell responses. Using multimodal single-cell sequencing and ex vivo functional assays, we demonstrate that DRP-104 reverses T cell exhaustion, decreases Tregs, and enhances the function of CD4 and CD8 T cells, culminating in an improved response to anti-PD1 therapy. Our preclinical findings provide compelling evidence that DRP-104, currently in clinical trials, offers a promising therapeutic approach for treating patients with KEAP1 mutant lung cancer.
PMID: 38536921
ISSN: 2375-2548
CID: 5644942
Adeno-to-squamous transition drives resistance to KRAS inhibition in LKB1 mutant lung cancer
Tong, Xinyuan; Patel, Ayushi S; Kim, Eejung; Li, Hongjun; Chen, Yueqing; Li, Shuai; Liu, Shengwu; Dilly, Julien; Kapner, Kevin S; Zhang, Ningxia; Xue, Yun; Hover, Laura; Mukhopadhyay, Suman; Sherman, Fiona; Myndzar, Khrystyna; Sahu, Priyanka; Gao, Yijun; Li, Fei; Li, Fuming; Fang, Zhaoyuan; Jin, Yujuan; Gao, Juntao; Shi, Minglei; Sinha, Satrajit; Chen, Luonan; Chen, Yang; Kheoh, Thian; Yang, Wenjing; Yanai, Itai; Moreira, Andre L; Velcheti, Vamsidhar; Neel, Benjamin G; Hu, Liang; Christensen, James G; Olson, Peter; Gao, Dong; Zhang, Michael Q; Aguirre, Andrew J; Wong, Kwok-Kin; Ji, Hongbin
KRASG12C inhibitors (adagrasib and sotorasib) have shown clinical promise in targeting KRASG12C-mutated lung cancers; however, most patients eventually develop resistance. In lung patients with adenocarcinoma with KRASG12C and STK11/LKB1 co-mutations, we find an enrichment of the squamous cell carcinoma gene signature in pre-treatment biopsies correlates with a poor response to adagrasib. Studies of Lkb1-deficient KRASG12C and KrasG12D lung cancer mouse models and organoids treated with KRAS inhibitors reveal tumors invoke a lineage plasticity program, adeno-to-squamous transition (AST), that enables resistance to KRAS inhibition. Transcriptomic and epigenomic analyses reveal ΔNp63 drives AST and modulates response to KRAS inhibition. We identify an intermediate high-plastic cell state marked by expression of an AST plasticity signature and Krt6a. Notably, expression of the AST plasticity signature and KRT6A at baseline correlates with poor adagrasib responses. These data indicate the role of AST in KRAS inhibitor resistance and provide predictive biomarkers for KRAS-targeted therapies in lung cancer.
PMID: 38402609
ISSN: 1878-3686
CID: 5691332
EML4-ALK fusions drive lung adeno-to-squamous transition through JAK-STAT activation
Qin, Zhen; Yue, Meiting; Tang, Shijie; Wu, Fengying; Sun, Honghua; Li, Yuan; Zhang, Yongchang; Izumi, Hiroki; Huang, Hsinyi; Wang, Wanying; Xue, Yun; Tong, Xinyuan; Mori, Shunta; Taki, Tetsuro; Goto, Koichi; Jin, Yujuan; Li, Fei; Li, Fu-Ming; Gao, Yijun; Fang, Zhaoyuan; Fang, Yisheng; Hu, Liang; Yan, Xiumin; Xu, Guoliang; Chen, Haiquan; Kobayashi, Susumu S; Ventura, Andrea; Wong, Kwok-Kin; Zhu, Xueliang; Chen, Liang; Ren, Shengxiang; Chen, Luo-Nan; Ji, Hongbin
Human lung adenosquamous cell carcinoma (LUAS), containing both adenomatous and squamous pathologies, exhibits strong cancer plasticity. We find that ALK rearrangement is detectable in 5.1-7.5% of human LUAS, and transgenic expression of EML4-ALK drives lung adenocarcinoma (LUAD) formation initially and squamous transition at late stage. We identify club cells as the main cell-of-origin for squamous transition. Through recapitulating lineage transition in organoid system, we identify JAK-STAT signaling, activated by EML4-ALK phase separation, significantly promotes squamous transition. Integrative study with scRNA-seq and immunostaining identify a plastic cell subpopulation in ALK-rearranged human LUAD showing squamous biomarker expression. Moreover, those relapsed ALK-rearranged LUAD show notable upregulation of squamous biomarkers. Consistently, mouse squamous tumors or LUAD with squamous signature display certain resistance to ALK inhibitor, which can be overcome by combined JAK1/2 inhibitor treatment. This study uncovers strong plasticity of ALK-rearranged tumors in orchestrating phenotypic transition and drug resistance and proposes a potentially effective therapeutic strategy.
PMCID:10824105
PMID: 38284990
ISSN: 1540-9538
CID: 5627342
EZH2 inhibition promotes tumor immunogenicity in lung squamous cell carcinomas
DuCote, Tanner J; Song, Xiulong; Naughton, Kassandra J; Chen, Fan; Plaugher, Daniel R; Childress, Avery R; Gellert, Abigail R; Skaggs, Erika M; Qu, Xufeng; Liu, Jinze; Liu, Jinpeng; Li, Fei; Wong, Kwok-Kin; Brainson, Christine F
Two important factors that contribute to resistance to immune checkpoint inhibitors (ICIs) are an immune-suppressive microenvironment and limited antigen presentation by tumor cells. In this study, we examine if inhibition of the methyltransferase EZH2 can increase ICI response in lung squamous cell carcinomas (LSCCs). Our in vitro experiments using 2D human cancer cell lines as well as 3D murine and patient derived organoids treated with two inhibitors of the EZH2 plus interferon- (IFN) showed that EZH2 inhibition leads to expression of both major histocompatibility complex class I and II (MHCI/II) expression at both the mRNA and protein levels. ChIP-sequencing confirmed loss of EZH2-mediated histone marks and gain of activating histone marks at key loci. Further, we demonstrate strong tumor control in models of both autochthonous and syngeneic LSCC treated with anti-PD1 immunotherapy with EZH2 inhibition. Single-cell RNA sequencing and immune cell profiling demonstrated phenotypic changes towards more tumor suppressive phenotypes in EZH2 inhibitor treated tumors. These results indicate that EZH2 inhibitors could increase ICI responses in patients undergoing treatment for LSCC.
PMID: 38265267
ISSN: 2767-9764
CID: 5624942
FGFR inhibition augments anti-PD-1 efficacy in murine FGFR3-mutant bladder cancer by abrogating immunosuppression
Okato, Atsushi; Utsumi, Takanobu; Ranieri, Michela; Zheng, Xingnan; Zhou, Mi; Pereira, Luiza D; Chen, Ting; Kita, Yuki; Wu, Di; Hyun, Hyesun; Lee, Hyojin; Gdowski, Andrew S; Raupp, John D; Clark-Garvey, Sean; Manocha, Ujjawal; Chafitz, Alison; Sherman, Fiona; Stephens, Janaye; Rose, Tracy L; Milowsky, Matthew I; Wobker, Sara E; Serody, Jonathan S; Damrauer, Jeffrey S; Wong, Kwok-Kin; Kim, William Y
The combination of targeted therapy with immune checkpoint inhibition (ICI) is an area of intense interest. We studied the interaction of fibroblast growth factor receptor (FGFR) inhibition with ICI in urothelial carcinoma (UC) of the bladder, in which FGFR3 is altered in 50% of cases. Using an FGFR3-driven, Trp53-mutant genetically engineered murine model (UPFL), we demonstrate that UPFL tumors recapitulate the histology and molecular subtype of their FGFR3-altered human counterparts. Additionally, UPFL1 allografts exhibit hyperprogression to ICI associated with an expansion of T regulatory cells (Tregs). Erdafitinib blocked Treg proliferation in vitro, while in vivo ICI-induced Treg expansion was fully abrogated by FGFR inhibition. Combined erdafitinib and ICI resulted in high therapeutic efficacy. In aggregate, our work establishes that, in mice, co-alteration of FGFR3 and Trp53 results in high-grade, non-muscle-invasive UC and presents a previously underappreciated role for FGFR inhibition in blocking ICI-induced Treg expansion.
PMCID:10786699
PMID: 38226620
ISSN: 1558-8238
CID: 5628792
Genome-Wide CRISPR Screens Identify Multiple Synthetic Lethal Targets That Enhance KRASG12C Inhibitor Efficacy
Mukhopadhyay, Suman; Huang, Hsin-Yi; Lin, Ziyan; Ranieri, Michela; Li, Shuai; Sahu, Soumyadip; Liu, Yingzhuo; Ban, Yi; Guidry, Kayla; Hu, Hai; Lopez, Alfonso; Sherman, Fiona; Tan, Yi Jer; Lee, Yeuan Ting; Armstrong, Amanda P; Dolgalev, Igor; Sahu, Priyanka; Zhang, Tinghu; Lu, Wenchao; Gray, Nathanael S; Christensen, James G; Tang, Tracy T; Velcheti, Vamsidhar; Khodadadi-Jamayran, Alireza; Wong, Kwok-Kin; Neel, Benjamin G
UNLABELLED:Non-small lung cancers (NSCLC) frequently (∼30%) harbor KRAS driver mutations, half of which are KRASG12C. KRAS-mutant NSCLC with comutated STK11 and/or KEAP1 is particularly refractory to conventional, targeted, and immune therapy. Development of KRASG12C inhibitors (G12Ci) provided a major therapeutic advance, but resistance still limits their efficacy. To identify genes whose deletion augments efficacy of the G12Cis adagrasib (MRTX-849) or adagrasib plus TNO155 (SHP2i), we performed genome-wide CRISPR/Cas9 screens on KRAS/STK11-mutant NSCLC lines. Recurrent, potentially targetable, synthetic lethal (SL) genes were identified, including serine-threonine kinases, tRNA-modifying and proteoglycan synthesis enzymes, and YAP/TAZ/TEAD pathway components. Several SL genes were confirmed by siRNA/shRNA experiments, and the YAP/TAZ/TEAD pathway was extensively validated in vitro and in mice. Mechanistic studies showed that G12Ci treatment induced gene expression of RHO paralogs and activators, increased RHOA activation, and evoked ROCK-dependent nuclear translocation of YAP. Mice and patients with acquired G12Ci- or G12Ci/SHP2i-resistant tumors showed strong overlap with SL pathways, arguing for the relevance of the screen results. These findings provide a landscape of potential targets for future combination strategies, some of which can be tested rapidly in the clinic. SIGNIFICANCE/UNASSIGNED:Identification of synthetic lethal genes with KRASG12C using genome-wide CRISPR/Cas9 screening and credentialing of the ability of TEAD inhibition to enhance KRASG12C efficacy provides a roadmap for combination strategies. See related commentary by Johnson and Haigis, p. 4005.
PMID: 37729426
ISSN: 1538-7445
CID: 5606372