Systematic investigation of chemo-immunotherapy synergism to shift anti-PD-1 resistance in cancer.
Yue WangDhamotharan PattarayanHaozhe HuangYueshan ZhaoSihan LiYifei WangMin ZhangSong LiDa YangPublished in: Nature communications (2024)
Chemo-immunotherapy combinations have been regarded as one of the most practical ways to improve immunotherapy response in cancer patients. In this study, we integrate the transcriptomics data from anti-PD-1-treated tumors and compound-treated cancer cell lines to systematically screen for chemo-immunotherapy synergisms in silico. Through analyzing anti-PD-1 induced expression changes in patient tumors, we develop a shift ability score to measure if a chemotherapy or a small molecule inhibitor treatment can shift anti-PD-1 resistance in tumor cells. By applying shift ability analysis to 41,321 compounds and 16,853 shRNA treated cancer cell lines transcriptomic data, we characterize the landscape of chemo-immunotherapy synergism and experimentally validated a mitochondrial RNA-dependent mechanism for drug-induced immune activation in tumor. Our study represents an effort to mechanistically characterize chemo-immunotherapy synergism and will facilitate future pre-clinical and clinical studies.
Keyphrases
- drug induced
- photodynamic therapy
- papillary thyroid
- locally advanced
- small molecule
- combination therapy
- liver injury
- cancer therapy
- squamous cell
- single cell
- electronic health record
- oxidative stress
- big data
- lymph node metastasis
- radiation therapy
- squamous cell carcinoma
- childhood cancer
- young adults
- diabetic rats
- high throughput
- current status
- endothelial cells
- case report
- high glucose
- adverse drug
- rna seq
- stress induced
- molecular dynamics simulations