Login / Signup

MAPK pathway mutations in head and neck cancer affect immune microenvironments and ErbB3 signaling.

Hoi-Lam NganYuchen LiuAndrew Yuon FongPeony Hiu Yan PoonChun Kit YeungSharon Suet Man ChanAlexandria LauWenying PiaoHui LiJessie Sze Wing TseKwok-Wai LoSze Man ChanYu-Xiong SuJason Ying-Kuen ChanChin Wang LauGordon B MillsJennifer Rubin GrandisVivian Wai Yan Lui
Published in: Life science alliance (2020)
MAPK pathway mutations affect one-fifth of head and neck squamous cell carcinoma (HNSCC). Unexpectedly, MAPK pathway aberrations are associated with remarkably long patient survival, even among patients with TP53 mutations (median ∼14 yr). We explored underlying outcome-favoring mechanisms with omics followed by preclinical models. Strikingly, multiple hotspot and non-hotspot MAPK mutations (A/BRAF, HRAS, MAPK1, and MAP2K1/2) all abrogated ErbB3 activation, a well-established HNSCC progression signal. Inhibitor studies functionally defined ERK activity negatively regulating phospho-ErbB3 in MAPK-mutants. Furthermore, pan-pathway immunoprofiling investigations identified MAPK-mutant tumors as the only "CD8+ T-cell-inflamed" tumors inherently bearing high-immunoreactive, constitutive cytolytic tumor microenvironments. Immunocompetent MAPK-mutant HNSCC models displayed active cell death and massive CD8+ T-cell recruitment in situ. Consistent with CD8+ T-inflamed phenotypes, MAPK-mutant HNSCC patients, independent of tumor-mutational burden, survived 3.3-4 times longer than WT patients with anti-PD1/PD-L1 immunotherapies. Similar prognosticity was noted in pan-cancers. We uncovered clinical, signaling, and immunological uniqueness of MAPK-mutant HNSCC with potential biomarker utilities predicting favorable patient survival.
Keyphrases
  • signaling pathway
  • pi k akt
  • oxidative stress
  • cell death
  • end stage renal disease
  • wild type
  • cell proliferation
  • stem cells
  • case report
  • cell cycle arrest
  • mesenchymal stem cells
  • prognostic factors