Identification of Nonfunctional Alternatively Spliced Isoforms of STING in Human Acute Myeloid Leukemia.
Akash R BodaArthur J LiuSusana Castro-PandoBenjamin T WhitfieldJeffrey J MolldremGheath Al-AtrashMaria Emilia Di FrancescoPhilip JonesCasey R AgerMichael A CurranPublished in: Cancer research communications (2024)
We find that AML acquires resistance to innate immune activation via the STING pathway through aberrant splicing of the STING transcript including two novel forms described herein that act as dominant negatives. These data broaden understanding of how cancers evolve STING resistance, and suggest that the AML tumor microenvironment, not the cancer cell, should be the target of therapeutic interventions to activate STING.