New insights into the responder/nonresponder divide in rectal cancer: Damage-induced Type I IFNs dictate treatment efficacy and can be targeted to enhance radiotherapy

Author:

Uccello Taylor P.ORCID,Lesch Maggie L.,Kintzel Sarah A.,Gradzewicz Lauren B.,Lamrous Lillia,Murphy Shawn P.,Fleming Fergal J.,Mills Bradley N.,Murphy Joseph D.,Hughson Angela,Hannon Gary,Garrett-Larsen Jesse,Qiu Haoming,Drage Michael G.ORCID,Ye Jian,Gavras Nicholas W.,Keeley David C.,Love Tanzy M. T.,Repasky Elizabeth A.,Lord Edith M.,Linehan David C.,Gerber Scott A.

Abstract

AbstractRectal cancer ranks as the second leading cause of cancer-related deaths. Neoadjuvant therapy for rectal cancer patients often results in individuals that respond well to therapy and those that respond poorly, requiring life-altering excision surgery. It is inadequately understood what dictates this responder/nonresponder divide. Our major aim is to identify what factors in the tumor microenvironment drive a fraction of rectal cancer patients to respond to radiotherapy. We also sought to distinguish potential biomarkers that would indicate a positive response to therapy and design combinatorial therapeutics to enhance radiotherapy efficacy. To address this, we developed an orthotopic murine model of rectal cancer treated with short course radiotherapy that recapitulates the bimodal response observed in the clinic. We utilized a robust combination of transcriptomics and protein analysis to identify differences between responding and nonresponding tumors. Our mouse model recapitulates human disease in which a fraction of tumors respond to radiotherapy (responders) while the majority are nonresponsive. We determined that responding tumors had increased damage-induced cell death, and a unique immune-activation signature associated with tumor-associated macrophages, cancer-associated fibroblasts, and CD8+ T cells. This signature was dependent on radiation-induced increases of Type I Interferons (IFNs). We investigated a therapeutic approach targeting the cGAS/STING pathway and demonstrated improved response rate following radiotherapy. These results suggest that modulating the Type I IFN pathway has the potential to improve radiation therapy efficacy in RC.

Funder

U.S. Department of Health & Human Services | NIH | Center for Scientific Review

Division of Cancer Prevention, National Cancer Institute

U.S. Department of Health & Human Services | NIH | National Cancer Institute

Publisher

Springer Science and Business Media LLC

Subject

Cancer Research,Cell Biology,Cellular and Molecular Neuroscience,Immunology

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