by Jeff Hansen, University of Alabama at Birmingham
Constitutive activation of JAK1/2 in IFNγR1KO melanoma cells. a Identification of a JAK1/2-centric network of activated protein tyrosine kinases in IFNγR1KO cells by kinomic analysis. Input nodes (kinases) with large blue circles around them and smaller red circles on the top right corner indicate increased activity in IFNγR1KO cells. Arrowheads denote the direction of interaction and colors of the lines indicate the type of interaction (yellow: positive; red: negative; gray: context-dependent). b Scrambled and IFNγR1KO cells were cultured under normoxic (21% O2) or tumor microenvironment-mimicking hypoxic (1% O2) culture conditions, followed by Western blot (WB) analyses of p-JAK1/2 and total-JAK1/2. c p-STAT3 and total-STAT3 in scrambled and IFNγR1KO cells by WB. d, e Scrambled and IFNγR1KO cells were transduced with control lentiviruses (Ctrl) or lentiviruses encoding mouse IFNγR1 for re-expression (IFNγR1R). Successfully transduced cells were analyzed for IFNγR1 expression by flow cytometry (FACS strategy 1) (d) and p-JAK1/2 by WB (e). β-actin was used as a loading control in WB. Experiments were repeated twice with similar results in b, c, and e. Credit: Nature Communications (2022). DOI: 10.1038/s41467-022-32754-7
Over the last decade, immune checkpoint blockers, or ICBs, have revolutionized treatment for various advanced cancers, including melanoma, the most aggressive skin cancer that was considered largely incurable not long ago. However, three-fourths of advanced-melanoma patients are resistant to ICBs.
Now, in a report published in Nature Communications, researchers reveal a potential target—using the clinically approved drug ruxolitinib—to suppress ICB-resistant melanomas.
“Since ruxolitinib is clinically approved and being tested in patients with advanced solid tumors, non-small-cell lung cancer and triple-negative breast cancer, our study justifies further testing of ruxolitinib in patients with advanced melanomathat are resistant to ICBs,” said Lewis Zhichang Shi, M.D., Ph.D., an associate professor in the University of Alabama at Birmingham Department of Radiation Oncology.
Shi notes that ruxolitinib will likely need to be combined with other therapeutic modalities to achieve a long-term cure.
For half a dozen years, it was known that tumor loss of interferon-gamma signaling was a major mechanism of resistance against two ICB drugs, anti-CTLA-4 and anti-PD-1. However, ways to overcome this resistance remained elusive.
This loss of interferon-gamma signaling in human melanomas is caused by dysregulation of genes in the interferon-gamma signaling pathway. However, in mouse models the knockdown mutations failed to show how a loss of interferon-gamma signaling in tumor cells modulated the activity of tumor-infiltrating T cells, or TILs, because those models still contain some interferon-gamma signaling. TIL immune cells are vital for cancer control because they are able to detect and destroy tumors. However, in a countermove, cancers learn to evade this destruction by upping immune checkpoint proteins on the surface of their cells, and these surface proteins send an “off” signal to TILs.
So researchers led by Shi and UAB Department of Radiation Oncology Chair James A. Bonner, M.D., created a cleaner mouse melanoma model by knocking out the receptor gene for interferon-gamma signaling. They used this improved knockout model—called IFNγR1KO—to probe the mechanisms of ICB resistance and how the IFNγR1KO melanomas alter the response of TILs to ICBs.
Compared to non-knockout melanomas, the mouse IFNγR1KO melanomas showed reduced infiltration of TILs such as CD8 killer T cells, and the TILs had reduced immune activity against the tumors. This revealed that normal interferon-gamma signaling in the melanoma plays an important role in shaping TILs. To corroborate these preclinical findings, the researchers, in collaboration with Zechen Chong, Ph.D., an assistant professor in the UAB Department of Genetics and Informatics Institute, also did bioinformatics analysis of human melanoma data from The Cancer Genome Atlas. They found that melanomas with attenuated interferon-gamma signaling also had decreased expression of T cell signature genes, indicating reduced T cell infiltration and function.
Mechanistically, the IFNγR1KO mouse melanomas had a network of continuously active protein tyrosine kinases that centered on activated JAK1/2 kinases, and this intracellular signaling pathway was mediated by activated mTOR signaling.
Ruxolitinib is an inhibitor of JAK1/2. The researchers found that ruxolitinib suppressed the cancerous growth of IFNγR1KO melanomas, but not control melanomas. Experimental depletion of T cells or host tumor necrosis factor signaling completely abrogated ruxolitinib efficacy, leading researchers to conclude that ruxolitinib suppression of the IFNγR1KO melanomas depends on T cells and the host cytokine tumor necrosis factor. Researchers also found that ruxolitinib mediates its therapeutic effect by reprogramming the TILs, not through direct killing of tumor cells.
Shi and Bonner say they now are actively soliciting clinical interest in exploring JAK1/2 inhibition as a strategy to bypass ICB resistance in melanoma patients, a pressing unmet medical need.
Co-first authors of the study, “Selective suppression of melanoma lacking IFN-γ pathway by JAK inhibition depends on T cells and host TNF signaling,” are Hongxing Shen, a postdoctoral scholar in the Shi lab, and Fengyuan Huang, a Ph.D. student in the Chong group
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