氧化应激
烟草烟雾
头颈部癌
致癌物
免疫
医学
环境卫生
头颈部
烟雾
癌症
免疫学
生物
内科学
免疫系统
化学
遗传学
外科
有机化学
作者
Yanming Li,Pedram Yadollahi,Francis Essien,Vasanta Putluri,Srinivasa R. Chandra,Karthik Reddy Kami Reddy,AHM Kazi Mostofa Kamal,Nagireddy Putluri,LO Abdur-Rahman,Elisa Ruiz-Echartea,Keenan Ernste,Archana Trivedi,Jonathan Vazquez‐Perez,William Henry Hudson,William K. Decker,Ronak Y. Patel,Abdullah A. Osman,Farrah Kheradmand,Stephen Y. Lai,Jeffrey N. Myers
标识
DOI:10.1101/2024.10.17.618907
摘要
Abstract Purpose Exposomes are critical drivers of carcinogenesis. However, how they modulate tumor behavior remains unclear. Extensive clinical data link cigarette smoke as a key exposome that promotes aggressive tumors, higher rates of metastasis, reduced response to chemoradiotherapy, and suppressed anti-tumor immunity. We sought to determine whether smoke itself can modulate aggressive tumor behavior in head and neck squamous cell carcinoma (HNSCC) through reprogramming the cellular reductive state. Experimental design Using established human and murine HNSCC cell lines and syngeneic mouse models, we utilized conventional western blotting, steady state and flux metabolomics, RNA sequencing, quantitative proteomics and flow cytometry to analyze the impact of smoke exposure on HNSCC tumor biology. Results Cigarette smoke persistently activated Nrf2 target genes essential for maintenance of the cellular reductive state and survival under conditions of increased oxidative stress in HNSCC regardless of HPV status. In contrast to e-cigarette vapor, conventional cigarette smoke mobilizes cellular metabolism toward oxidative stress adaptation, resulting in development of cross-resistance to cisplatin. In parallel, smoke exposure modulates both expression of PDL1 and the secretory phenotype of HNSCC cells through activation of NF-κB resulting in an altered tumor immune microenvironment (TIME) in syngeneic mouse models and altered PBMC differentiation that includes downregulated expression of antigen presentation and costimulatory genes in myeloid cells. Conclusion Cigarette smoke exposome is a potent activator of the Nrf2 pathway and is a likely primary trigger for the tripartite phenotype of aggressive HNSCC consisting of: 1) reduced chemotherapy sensitivity, 2) enhanced metastatic potential and 3) suppressed anti-tumor immunity. Statement of significance The smoke exposome drives aggressive tumor behavior, treatment resistance and suppressed immunity through coordinated metabolic reprogramming. Successfully targeting this adaptation is critical to improving survival in smokers with head and neck cancer.
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