Login / Signup

MET Amplification Attenuates Lung Tumor Response to Immunotherapy by Inhibiting STING.

Yong ZhangQifan YangXiangyu ZengManxiang WangShuang DongBin YangXinyi TuTing WeiWenzhuan XieChao ZhangQiang GuoJake A KloeberYueyu CaoGuijie GuoQin ZhouFei ZhaoJinzhou HuangJincheng LiuKai ZhangMingwei WangPing YinKuntian LuoMin DengWootae KimJing HouYu ShiQian ZhuLifeng ChenSheng HuJunqiu YueGuoliang PiZhenkun Lou
Published in: Cancer discovery (2021)
Immune checkpoint blockade (ICB) has revolutionized cancer therapy. However, the response of patients to ICB is difficult to predict. Here, we examined 81 patients with lung cancer under ICB treatment and found that patients with MET amplification were resistant to ICB and had a poor progression-free survival. Tumors with MET amplifications had significantly decreased STING levels and antitumor T-cell infiltration. Furthermore, we performed deep single-cell RNA sequencing on more than 20,000 single immune cells and identified an immunosuppressive signature with increased subsets of XIST- and CD96-positive exhausted natural killer (NK) cells and decreased CD8+ T-cell and NK-cell populations in patients with MET amplification. Mechanistically, we found that oncogenic MET signaling induces phosphorylation of UPF1 and downregulates tumor cell STING expression via modulation of the 3'-UTR length of STING by UPF1. Decreased efficiency of ICB by MET amplification can be overcome by inhibiting MET. SIGNIFICANCE: We suggest that the combination of MET inhibitor together with ICB will overcome ICB resistance induced by MET amplification. Our report reveals much-needed information that will benefit the treatment of patients with primary MET amplification or EGFR-tyrosine kinase inhibitor resistant-related MET amplification.This article is highlighted in the In This Issue feature, p. 2659.
Keyphrases