STING inhibits the reactivation of dormant metastasis in lung adenocarcinoma.
Jing HuFrancisco J Sánchez RiveraZhenghan WangGabriela N JohnsonYu-Jui HoKaruna GaneshShigeaki UmedaSiting GanAdriana M MujalRebecca B DelconteJessica P HamptonHuiyong ZhaoSanjay KottapalliElisa de StanchinaChristine A Iacobuzio-DonahueDana Pe'erScott W LoweJoseph C SunJoan MassaguéPublished in: Nature (2023)
Metastasis frequently develops from disseminated cancer cells that remain dormant after the apparently successful treatment of a primary tumour. These cells fluctuate between an immune-evasive quiescent state and a proliferative state liable to immune-mediated elimination 1-6 . Little is known about the clearing of reawakened metastatic cells and how this process could be therapeutically activated to eliminate residual disease in patients. Here we use models of indolent lung adenocarcinoma metastasis to identify cancer cell-intrinsic determinants of immune reactivity during exit from dormancy. Genetic screens of tumour-intrinsic immune regulators identified the stimulator of interferon genes (STING) pathway as a suppressor of metastatic outbreak. STING activity increases in metastatic progenitors that re-enter the cell cycle and is dampened by hypermethylation of the STING promoter and enhancer in breakthrough metastases or by chromatin repression in cells re-entering dormancy in response to TGFβ. STING expression in cancer cells derived from spontaneous metastases suppresses their outgrowth. Systemic treatment of mice with STING agonists eliminates dormant metastasis and prevents spontaneous outbreaks in a T cell- and natural killer cell-dependent manner-these effects require cancer cell STING function. Thus, STING provides a checkpoint against the progression of dormant metastasis and a therapeutically actionable strategy for the prevention of disease relapse.
Keyphrases
- cell cycle
- induced apoptosis
- genome wide
- small cell lung cancer
- squamous cell carcinoma
- cell cycle arrest
- transcription factor
- gene expression
- dna damage
- signaling pathway
- type diabetes
- end stage renal disease
- newly diagnosed
- dna methylation
- poor prognosis
- endoplasmic reticulum stress
- adipose tissue
- dendritic cells
- binding protein
- immune response
- chronic kidney disease
- bone marrow
- free survival
- replacement therapy
- pi k akt