Gerber Scott, Uccello Taylor, Lesch Maggie, Kintzel Sarah, Gradzewicz Lauren, Lamrous Lillia, Murphy Shawn, Fleming Fergal, Mills Bradley, Murphy Joseph, Hughson Angela, Garrett-Larsen Jesse, Qiu Haoming, Drage Michael, Ye Jian, Gavras Nicholas, Keeley David, Love Tanzy, Repasky Elizabeth, Lord Edith, Linehan David
University of Rochester School of Medicine and Dentistry.
University of Rochester Medical Center.
Res Sq. 2023 Apr 13:rs.3.rs-2767780. doi: 10.21203/rs.3.rs-2767780/v1.
Rectal 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.
直肠癌是癌症相关死亡的第二大主要原因。直肠癌患者的新辅助治疗常常导致个体对治疗反应良好或反应不佳,而反应不佳者需要进行改变生活的切除手术。目前对于导致这种反应者/无反应者差异的因素仍了解不足。我们的主要目标是确定肿瘤微环境中的哪些因素促使一部分直肠癌患者对放疗产生反应。我们还试图区分能够表明对治疗有积极反应的潜在生物标志物,并设计联合疗法以提高放疗疗效。为了解决这个问题,我们建立了一个直肠癌原位小鼠模型,用短程放疗进行治疗,该模型概括了临床上观察到的双峰反应。我们利用转录组学和蛋白质分析的强大组合来识别反应性肿瘤和无反应性肿瘤之间的差异。我们的小鼠模型概括了人类疾病,其中一部分肿瘤对放疗有反应(反应者),而大多数则无反应。我们确定,反应性肿瘤的损伤诱导细胞死亡增加,并且具有与肿瘤相关巨噬细胞、癌症相关成纤维细胞和CD8 + T细胞相关的独特免疫激活特征。这种特征依赖于辐射诱导的I型干扰素(IFN)增加。我们研究了一种针对cGAS/STING途径的治疗方法,并证明放疗后反应率有所提高。这些结果表明,调节I型干扰素途径有可能提高直肠癌的放射治疗疗效。