ENPP1 is an innate immune checkpoint of the anticancer cGAMP-STING pathway in breast cancer.
Songnan WangVolker BöhnertAlby J JosephValentino SudaryoGemini SkariahJason T SwindermanFeiqiao Brian YuVishvak SubramanyamDenise M WolfXuchao LyuLuke A GilbertLaura J Van't VeerHani GoodarziLingyin LiPublished in: Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America (2023)
Ectonucleotide pyrophosphatase/phosphodiesterase 1 (ENPP1) expression correlates with poor prognosis in many cancers, and we previously discovered that ENPP1 is the dominant hydrolase of extracellular cGAMP: a cancer-cell-produced immunotransmitter that activates the anticancer stimulator of interferon genes (STING) pathway. However, ENPP1 has other catalytic activities and the molecular and cellular mechanisms contributing to its tumorigenic effects remain unclear. Here, using single-cell RNA-seq, we show that ENPP1 in both cancer and normal tissues drives primary breast tumor growth and metastasis by dampening extracellular 2'3'-cyclic-GMP-AMP (cGAMP)-STING-mediated antitumoral immunity. ENPP1 loss-of-function in both cancer cells and normal tissues slowed primary tumor growth and abolished metastasis. Selectively abolishing the cGAMP hydrolysis activity of ENPP1 phenocopied ENPP1 knockout in a STING-dependent manner, demonstrating that restoration of paracrine cGAMP-STING signaling is the dominant anti-cancer mechanism of ENPP1 inhibition. Finally, ENPP1 expression in breast tumors deterministically predicated whether patients would remain free of distant metastasis after pembrolizumab (anti-PD-1) treatment followed by surgery. Altogether, ENPP1 blockade represents a strategy to exploit cancer-produced extracellular cGAMP for controlled local activation of STING and is therefore a promising therapeutic approach against breast cancer.
Keyphrases
- poor prognosis
- rna seq
- single cell
- long non coding rna
- immune response
- minimally invasive
- end stage renal disease
- escherichia coli
- lymph node
- newly diagnosed
- young adults
- genome wide
- dendritic cells
- staphylococcus aureus
- squamous cell
- dna methylation
- patient reported outcomes
- protein kinase
- childhood cancer
- biofilm formation
- epidermal growth factor receptor
- breast cancer risk