| Literature DB >> 34611484 |
Austin R Dosch1,2, Walid K Chatila3, Yuguang Ban4, Anna Bianchi1, Nilesh U Deshpande1, Iago De Castro Silva1, Nipun B Merchant1,2, Jashodeep Datta1,2.
Abstract
Despite increasingly thorough mechanistic understanding of the dominant genetic drivers of gastrointestinal (GI) tumorigenesis (e.g., Ras/Raf, TP53, etc.), only a small proportion of these molecular alterations are therapeutically actionable. In an attempt to address this therapeutic impasse, our group has proposed an innovative extreme outlier model to identify novel cooperative molecular vulnerabilities in high-risk GI cancers which dictate prognosis, correlate with distinct patterns of metastasis, and define therapeutic sensitivity or resistance. Our model also proposes comprehensive investigation of their downstream transcriptomic, immunomic, metabolic, or upstream epigenomic cellular consequences to reveal novel therapeutic targets in previously "undruggable" tumors with high-risk genomic features. Leveraging this methodology, our and others' data reveal that the genomic cooperativity between Ras and p53 alterations is not only prognostically relevant in GI malignancy, but may also represent the incipient molecular events that initiate and sustain innate immunoregulatory signaling networks within the GI tumor microenvironment, driving T-cell exclusion and therapeutic resistance in these cancers. As such, deciphering the unique transcriptional programs encoded by Ras-p53 cooperativity that promote innate immune trafficking and chronic inflammatory tumor-stromal-immune crosstalk may uncover immunologic vulnerabilities that could be exploited to develop novel therapeutic strategies for these difficult-to-treat malignancies. Copyright:Entities:
Keywords: Ras; Ras-p53 cooperativity; TP53; gastrointestinal cancer; immune
Year: 2021 PMID: 34611484 PMCID: PMC8487722 DOI: 10.18632/oncotarget.27983
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Oncotarget ISSN: 1949-2553
Figure 1Ras-p53 genomic cooperativity in gastrointestinal cancer.
(A) Oncoprint demonstrating most frequent putative driver alterations in patients with colorectal cancer in the MSK-IMPACT Clinical Sequencing Cohort (available through http://www.cbioportal.org). Gene names are provided to the left and mutational frequencies to the right. Genomic alterations are classified as putative driver or structural alterations in adjoining legend. (B) Frequency of co-altered Ras pathway and p53 alterations were determined in patients with pancreatic cancer (PAAD), rectal cancer (READ), colon cancer (COAD), stomach cancer (STAD), cholangiocarcinoma (CHOL), and esophageal (ESCA) cancer in The Cancer Genome Atlas (TCGA) dataset.
Differentially overexpressed transcripts associated with innate immunity induced by cooperative Ras-p53 mutations
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Data from Buganim et al. demonstrating increased expression of selected chemokines (i.e., CXCL1, CXCL2, CXCL3, and CXCL6) and pro-inflammatory ligands (i.e., IL1B, IL6, IL8, and CSF2) from immortalized human fibroblasts transduced with RasG12V and p53R175H mutant constructs [24].
Figure 2Ras-p53 cooperative mutations in rectal and colon cancer are associated with an innate immunoregulatory phenotype.
Single-cell immune deconvolution from bulk RNA sequencing data from colon and rectal cancer cases curated from The Cancer Genome Atlas (TCGA) Pan-Cancer database was performed using ImmuneCellAI as described in Materials and Methods. (A and B) Comparison of neutrophil, macrophage, dendritic cell (DC), monocyte, inducible T regulatory type 1 (Tr1), and γδ T-cell signatures between Ras-alone (blue) and Ras-p53 co-operative (red) (A) colon and (B) rectal cancer samples in the TCGA database. ns, not significant; * p < 0.05; ** p < 0.01.