ATR inhibition activates cancer cell cGAS/STING-interferon signaling and promotes antitumor immunity in small-cell lung cancer. Academic Article uri icon

Overview

abstract

  • Patients with small-cell lung cancer (SCLC) have poor prognosis and typically experience only transient benefits from combined immune checkpoint blockade (ICB) and chemotherapy. Here, we show that inhibition of ataxia telangiectasia and rad3 related (ATR), the primary replication stress response activator, induces DNA damage-mediated micronuclei formation in SCLC models. ATR inhibition in SCLC activates the stimulator of interferon genes (STING)-mediated interferon signaling, recruits T cells, and augments the antitumor immune response of programmed death-ligand 1 (PD-L1) blockade in mouse models. We demonstrate that combined ATR and PD-L1 inhibition causes improved antitumor response than PD-L1 alone as the second-line treatment in SCLC. This study shows that targeting ATR up-regulates major histocompatibility class I expression in preclinical models and SCLC clinical samples collected from a first-in-class clinical trial of ATR inhibitor, berzosertib, with topotecan in patients with relapsed SCLC. Targeting ATR represents a transformative vulnerability of SCLC and is a complementary strategy to induce STING-interferon signaling-mediated immunogenicity in SCLC.

publication date

  • September 27, 2024

Research

keywords

  • Ataxia Telangiectasia Mutated Proteins
  • Lung Neoplasms
  • Membrane Proteins
  • Nucleotidyltransferases
  • Signal Transduction
  • Small Cell Lung Carcinoma

Identity

PubMed Central ID

  • PMC11430494

Scopus Document Identifier

  • 85205275602

Digital Object Identifier (DOI)

  • 10.1126/sciadv.ado4618

PubMed ID

  • 39331709

Additional Document Info

volume

  • 10

issue

  • 39