| Literature DB >> 35120600 |
Adele M Nicolas1, Marina Pesic1, Esther Engel2, Paul K Ziegler3, Markus Diefenhardt4, Kilian B Kennel1, Florian Buettner5, Claire Conche1, Valentina Petrocelli1, Eiman Elwakeel6, Andreas Weigert7, Anna Zinoveva1, Maximilian Fleischmann4, Björn Häupl5, Cem Karakütük8, Hanibal Bohnenberger8, Mohammed H Mosa1, Lars Kaderali9, Jochen Gaedcke10, Michael Ghadimi10, Franz Rödel4, Melek C Arkan11, Thomas Oellerich5, Claus Rödel12, Emmanouil Fokas12, Florian R Greten13.
Abstract
Standard cancer therapy targets tumor cells without considering possible damage on the tumor microenvironment that could impair therapy response. In rectal cancer patients we find that inflammatory cancer-associated fibroblasts (iCAFs) are associated with poor chemoradiotherapy response. Employing a murine rectal cancer model or patient-derived tumor organoids and primary stroma cells, we show that, upon irradiation, interleukin-1α (IL-1α) not only polarizes cancer-associated fibroblasts toward the inflammatory phenotype but also triggers oxidative DNA damage, thereby predisposing iCAFs to p53-mediated therapy-induced senescence, which in turn results in chemoradiotherapy resistance and disease progression. Consistently, IL-1 inhibition, prevention of iCAFs senescence, or senolytic therapy sensitizes mice to irradiation, while lower IL-1 receptor antagonist serum levels in rectal patients correlate with poor prognosis. Collectively, we unravel a critical role for iCAFs in rectal cancer therapy resistance and identify IL-1 signaling as an attractive target for stroma-repolarization and prevention of cancer-associated fibroblasts senescence.Entities:
Keywords: IL-1 signalling; IL1RN SNP; cancer-associated fibroblasts; neoadjuvant therapy; rectal cancer; senescence
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Year: 2022 PMID: 35120600 DOI: 10.1016/j.ccell.2022.01.004
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Cancer Cell ISSN: 1535-6108 Impact factor: 31.743