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Tumor innate immunity primed by specific interferon-stimulated endogenous retroviruses

Authors :
Tran C. Thai
Masayuki Watanabe
Hideo Baba
Camilla L. Christensen
Hideki Terai
Russell W. Jenkins
Shunsuke Kitajima
Gao Zhang
Tian Tian
Pablo Tamayo
Jong Wook Kim
Jacob Sands
Yanxi Zhang
Brandon Piel
Ewa Sicinska
Cloud P. Paweletz
Timothy Hagan
Thanh U. Barbie
Marco Campisi
Rohit Thummalapalli
Hideo Watanabe
Yanan Kuang
Israel Cañadas
Amir Reza Aref
Evisa Gjini
Anika E. Adeni
Lynnette Marie Sholl
Diana Miao
Christine A. Lydon
Yu Imamura
David A. Barbie
Meenhard Herlyn
Debattama R. Sen
Ravindra Uppaluri
Kwok-Kin Wong
Shohei Koyama
Scott J. Rodig
Zhi Wei
Source :
Nature medicine, vol 24, iss 8, Nature medicine
Publication Year :
2018
Publisher :
eScholarship, University of California, 2018.

Abstract

Mesenchymal tumor subpopulations secrete pro-tumorigenic cytokines and promote treatment resistance1-4. This phenomenon has been implicated in chemorefractory small cell lung cancer and resistance to targeted therapies5-8, but remains incompletely defined. Here, we identify a subclass of endogenous retroviruses (ERVs) that engages innate immune signaling in these cells. Stimulated 3 prime antisense retroviral coding sequences (SPARCS) are oriented inversely in 3' untranslated regions of specific genes enriched for regulation by STAT1 and EZH2. Derepression of these loci results in double-stranded RNA generation following IFN-γ exposure due to bi-directional transcription from the STAT1-activated gene promoter and the 5' long terminal repeat of the antisense ERV. Engagement of MAVS and STING activates downstream TBK1, IRF3, and STAT1 signaling, sustaining a positive feedback loop. SPARCS induction in human tumors is tightly associated with major histocompatibility complex class 1 expression, mesenchymal markers, and downregulation of chromatin modifying enzymes, including EZH2. Analysis of cell lines with high inducible SPARCS expression reveals strong association with an AXL/MET-positive mesenchymal cell state. While SPARCS-high tumors are immune infiltrated, they also exhibit multiple features of an immune-suppressed microenviroment. Together, these data unveil a subclass of ERVs whose derepression triggers pathologic innate immune signaling in cancer, with important implications for cancer immunotherapy.

Details

Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Nature medicine, vol 24, iss 8, Nature medicine
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....8977d1e59077155c1ae4cc123ce67ce5