Immune Checkpoint Blockade Delays Cancer Development and Extends Survival in DNA Polymerase Mutator Syndromes.

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Tác giả: Somer Abdelfattah, Jennele Baul, Eduardo Cararo Lopes, Chang S Chan, Shridar Ganesan, Christian S Hinrichs, Zhixian Hu, Edmund C Lattime, Jesse R Powers, Joshua D Rabinowitz, Akshada Sawant, Fuqian Shi, Eileen P White

Ngôn ngữ: eng

Ký hiệu phân loại: 297.1248 Sources of Islam

Thông tin xuất bản: United States : Cancer research , 2025

Mô tả vật lý:

Bộ sưu tập: NCBI

ID: 709678

 Mutations in the exonuclease domains of the replicative nuclear DNA polymerases POLD1 and POLE are associated with increased cancer incidence, elevated tumor mutation burden (TMB), and enhanced response to immune checkpoint blockade (ICB). Although ICB is approved for treatment of several cancers, not all tumors with elevated TMB respond, highlighting the need for a better understanding of how TMB affects tumor biology and subsequently immunotherapy response. To address this, we generated mice with germline and conditional mutations in the exonuclease domains of Pold1 and Pole. Engineered mice with Pold1 and Pole mutator alleles presented with spontaneous cancers, primarily lymphomas, lung cancer, and intestinal tumors, whereas Pold1 mutant mice also developed tail skin carcinomas. These cancers had highly variable tissue type-dependent increased TMB with mutational signatures associated with POLD1 and POLE mutations found in human cancers. The Pold1 mutant tail tumors displayed increased TMB
  however, only a subset of established tumors responded to ICB. Similarly, introducing the mutator alleles into mice with lung cancer driven by mutant Kras and Trp53 deletion did not improve survival, whereas passaging these tumor cells in vitro without immune editing and subsequently implanting them into immunocompetent mice caused tumor rejection in vivo. These results demonstrated the efficiency by which cells with antigenic mutations are eliminated in vivo. Finally, ICB treatment of mutator mice earlier, before observable tumors had developed delayed cancer onset, improved survival and selected for tumors without aneuploidy, suggesting the potential of ICB in high-risk individuals for cancer prevention. Significance: Treating high-mutation burden mice with immunotherapy prior to cancer onset significantly improves survival, raising the possibility of utilizing immune checkpoint blockade for cancer prevention, especially in individuals with increased risk.
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