Abstract
Radiotherapy is the most widely used cancer treatment and improvements in its efficacy and safety are highly sought-after. Peposertib (also known as M3814), a potent and selective DNA-dependent protein kinase (DNA-PK) inhibitor, effectively suppresses the repair of radiation-induced DNA double-strand breaks (DSB) and regresses human xenograft tumors in preclinical models. Irradiated cancer cells devoid of p53 activity are especially sensitive to the DNA-PK inhibitor, as they lose a key cell-cycle checkpoint circuit and enter mitosis with unrepaired DSBs, leading to catastrophic consequences. Here, we show that inhibiting the repair of DSBs induced by ionizing radiation with peposertib offers a powerful new way for improving radiotherapy by simultaneously enhancing cancer cell killing and response to a bifunctional TGFb “trap”/anti-PD-L1 cancer immunotherapy. By promoting chromosome misalignment and missegregation in p53-deficient cancer cells with unrepaired DSBs, DNA-PK inhibitor accelerated micronuclei formation, a key generator of cytosolic DNA and activator of cGAS/ STING-dependent inflammatory signaling as it elevated PD-L1 expression in irradiated cancer cells. Triple combination of radiation, peposertib, and bintrafusp alfa, a fusion protein simultaneously inhibiting the profibrotic TGFb and immunosuppressive PD-L1 pathways was superior to dual combinations and suggested a novel approach to more efficacious radioimmunotherapy of cancer.
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CITATION STYLE
Carr, M. I., Chiu, L. Y., Guo, Y., Xu, C., Lazorchak, A. S., Yu, H., … Vassilev, L. T. (2022). DNA-PK Inhibitor Peposertib Amplifies Radiation-Induced Inflammatory Micronucleation and Enhances TGFb/PD-L1 Targeted Cancer Immunotherapy. Molecular Cancer Research, 20(4), 568–582. https://doi.org/10.1158/1541-7786.MCR-21-0612
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