Carlsen Lindsey, El-Deiry Wafik S
Laboratory of Translational Oncology and Experimental Cancer Therapeutics, The Warren Alpert Medical School, Brown University, Providence, RI, United States.
The Joint Program in Cancer Biology, Brown University and the Lifespan Health System, Providence, RI, United States.
Front Oncol. 2022 Oct 6;12:998388. doi: 10.3389/fonc.2022.998388. eCollection 2022.
DNA damage response inhibitors are widely used anti-cancer agents that have potent activity against tumor cells with deficiencies in various DNA damage response proteins such as BRCA1/2. Inhibition of other proteins in this pathway including PARP, DNA-PK, WEE1, CHK1/2, ATR, or ATM can sensitize cancer cells to radiotherapy and chemotherapy, and such combinations are currently being tested in clinical trials for treatment of many malignancies including breast, ovarian, rectal, and lung cancer. Unrepaired DNA damage induced by DNA damage response inhibitors alone or in combination with radio- or chemotherapy has a direct cytotoxic effect on cancer cells and can also engage anti-cancer innate and adaptive immune responses. DNA damage-induced immune stimulation occurs by a variety of mechanisms including by the cGAS/STING pathway, STAT1 and downstream TRAIL pathway activation, and direct immune cell activation. Whether or not the relative contribution of these mechanisms varies after treatment with different DNA damage response inhibitors or across cancers with different genetic aberrations in DNA damage response enzymes is not well-characterized, limiting the design of optimal combinations with radio- and chemotherapy. Here, we review how the inhibition of key DNA damage response enzymes including PARP, DNA-PK, WEE1, CHK1/2, ATR, and ATM induces innate and adaptive immune responses alone or in combination with radiotherapy, chemotherapy, and/or immunotherapy. We also discuss current progress in the clinical translation of immunostimulatory DNA-damaging treatment regimens and necessary future directions to optimize the immune-sensitizing potential of DNA damage response inhibitors.
DNA损伤反应抑制剂是广泛使用的抗癌药物,对具有BRCA1/2等各种DNA损伤反应蛋白缺陷的肿瘤细胞具有强大的活性。抑制该途径中的其他蛋白,包括PARP、DNA-PK、WEE1、CHK1/2、ATR或ATM,可使癌细胞对放疗和化疗敏感,目前此类联合疗法正在多项临床试验中进行测试,用于治疗包括乳腺癌、卵巢癌、直肠癌和肺癌在内的多种恶性肿瘤。单独使用或与放疗或化疗联合使用DNA损伤反应抑制剂所诱导的未修复DNA损伤,对癌细胞具有直接细胞毒性作用,还可引发抗癌固有免疫和适应性免疫反应。DNA损伤诱导的免疫刺激通过多种机制发生,包括cGAS/STING途径、STAT1及下游TRAIL途径激活以及直接免疫细胞激活。在用不同的DNA损伤反应抑制剂治疗后,或者在DNA损伤反应酶存在不同基因畸变的癌症中,这些机制的相对贡献是否有所不同,目前尚无充分的特征描述,这限制了与放疗和化疗的最佳联合方案的设计。在此,我们综述了抑制PARP、DNA-PK、WEE1、CHK1/2、ATR和ATM等关键DNA损伤反应酶如何单独或与放疗、化疗和/或免疫疗法联合诱导固有免疫和适应性免疫反应。我们还讨论了免疫刺激性DNA损伤治疗方案在临床转化方面的当前进展以及优化DNA损伤反应抑制剂免疫致敏潜力所需的未来方向。