Abstract
Background: Tumor cell senescence is a common outcome of anticancer therapy. Here we investigated how therapy-induced senescence (TIS) affects tumor-infiltrating leukocytes (TILs) and the efficacy of immunotherapy in melanoma. Methods: Tumor senescence was induced by AURKA or CDK4/6 inhibitors (AURKAi, CDK4/6i). Transcriptomes of six mouse tumors with differential response to AURKAi were analyzed by RNA sequencing, and TILs were characterized by flow cytometry. Chemokine RNA and protein expression were determined by quantitative real-time polymerase chain reaction and enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay. Therapeutic response was queried in immunodeficient mice, in mice with CCL5-deficient tumors, and in mice cotreated with CD137 agonist to activate TILs. CCL5 expression in reference to TIS and markers of TILs was studied in human melanoma tumors using patient-derived xenografts (n = 3 patients, n = 3 mice each), in AURKAi clinical trial samples (n = 3 patients, before/after therapy), and in The Cancer Genome Atlas (n = 278). All statistical tests were two-sided. Results: AURKAi response was associated with induction of the immune transcriptome (P = 3.5x10-29) while resistance inversely correlated with TIL numbers (Spearman r = -0.87, P
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CITATION STYLE
Vilgelm, A. E., Johnson, C. A., Prasad, N., Yang, J., Chen, S. C., Ayers, G. D., … Richmond, A. (2016). Connecting the Dots: Therapy-Induced Senescence and a Tumor-Suppressive Immune Microenvironment. Journal of the National Cancer Institute, 108(6). https://doi.org/10.1093/jnci/djv406
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