Paclitaxel Induces Micronucleation and Activates Pro-Inflammatory cGAS–STING Signaling in Triple-Negative Breast Cancer
癌症研究
三阴性乳腺癌
紫杉醇
免疫系统
医学
免疫检查点
癌症
乳腺癌
药理学
免疫学
生物
作者
Yang Hu,Baraa K Manasrah,Stephanie M. McGregor,Robert F. Lera,Roshan X. Norman,John B Tucker,Christina M Scribano,Rachel E Yan,Mouhita Humayun,Kari B. Wisinski,Amye J. Tevaarwerk,Ruth M O'Regan,Lee G Wilke,Beth A Weaver,David J Beebe,Ning Jin,Mark E. Burkard
出处
期刊:Molecular Cancer Therapeutics [American Association for Cancer Research] 日期:2021-12-01卷期号:20 (12): 2553-2567被引量:3
Taxanes remain one of the most effective medical treatments for breast cancer. Clinical trials have coupled taxanes with immune checkpoint inhibitors in patients with triple-negative breast cancer (TNBC) with promising results. However, the mechanism linking taxanes to immune activation is unclear. To determine if paclitaxel could elicit an antitumoral immune response, we sampled tumor tissues from patients with TNBC receiving weekly paclitaxel (80 mg/m2) and found increased stromal tumor-infiltrating lymphocytes and micronucleation over baseline in three of six samples. At clinically relevant concentrations, paclitaxel can induce chromosome missegregation on multipolar spindles during mitosis. Consequently, post-mitotic cells are multinucleated and contain micronuclei, which often activate cyclic GMP-AMP synthase (cGAS) and may induce a type I IFN response reliant on the stimulator of IFN genes (STING) pathway. Other microtubule-targeting agents, eribulin and vinorelbine, recapitulate this cGAS/STING response and increased the expression of immune checkpoint molecule, PD-L1, in TNBC cell lines. To test the possibility that microtubule-targeting agents sensitize tumors that express cGAS to immune checkpoint inhibitors, we identified 10 patients with TNBC treated with PD-L1 or PD-1, seven of whom also received microtubule-targeting agents. Elevated baseline cGAS expression significantly correlated with treatment response in patients receiving microtubule-targeting agents in combination with immune checkpoint inhibitors. Our study identifies a mechanism by which microtubule-targeting agents can potentiate an immune response in TNBC. Further, baseline cGAS expression may predict patient treatment response to therapies combining microtubule-targeting agents and immune checkpoint inhibitors.