作者
Meng‐Ju Wu,Hiroshi Kondo,Ashwin V. Kammula,Lei Shi,Yi Xiao,Sofiene Dhiab,Qin Xu,Chloe J. Slater,Omar I. Avila,Joshua Merritt,Hiroyuki Kato,Prabhat Kattel,Jonathan H. Sussman,Ilaria Gritti,Jason Eccleston,Yi Sun,Hyo Min Cho,Kira E. Olander,Takeshi Katsuda,Diana D. Shi,Milan R. Savani,Bailey Smith,James M. Cleary,Raúl Mostoslavsky,Vindhya Vijay,Yosuke Kitagawa,Hiroaki Wakimoto,Russell W. Jenkins,Kathleen B. Yates,Jihye Paik,Anna M. Tassinari,Hatice D. Saatcioglu,Adriana E. Tron,Wilhelm Haas,Daniel P. Cahill,Samuel K. McBrayer,Robert T. Manguso,Nabeel Bardeesy
摘要
Isocitrate dehydrogenase 1 ( IDH1 ) is the most commonly mutated metabolic gene across human cancers. Mutant IDH1 (mIDH1) generates the oncometabolite (R)-2-hydroxyglutarate, disrupting enzymes involved in epigenetics and other processes. A hallmark of IDH1 -mutant solid tumors is T cell exclusion, whereas mIDH1 inhibition in preclinical models restores antitumor immunity. Here, we define a cell-autonomous mechanism of mIDH1-driven immune evasion. IDH1 -mutant solid tumors show selective hypermethylation and silencing of the cytoplasmic double-stranded DNA (dsDNA) sensor CGAS , compromising innate immune signaling. mIDH1 inhibition restores DNA demethylation, derepressing CGAS and transposable element (TE) subclasses. dsDNA produced by TE-reverse transcriptase (TE-RT) activates cGAS, triggering viral mimicry and stimulating antitumor immunity. In summary, we demonstrate that mIDH1 epigenetically suppresses innate immunity and link endogenous RT activity to the mechanism of action of a US Food and Drug Administration–approved oncology drug.