Integrated analyses of multi-omic data derived from paired primary lung cancer and brain metastasis reveal the metabolic vulnerability as a novel therapeutic target

Lung cancer brain metastases (LC-BrMs) are frequently associated with dismal mortality rates in patients with lung cancer; however, standard of care therapies for LC-BrMs are still limited in their efficacy. A deep understanding of molecular mechanisms and tumor microenvironment of LC-BrMs will prov...

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Veröffentlicht in:Genome medicine 2024-11, Vol.16 (1), p.138-30, Article 138
Hauptverfasser: Duan, Hao, Ren, Jianlan, Wei, Shiyou, Yang, Zhenyu, Li, Chuan, Wang, Zhenning, Li, Meichen, Wei, Zhi, Liu, Yu, Wang, Xiuqi, Lan, Hongbin, Zeng, Zhen, Xie, Maodi, Xie, Yuan, Wu, Suwen, Hu, Wanming, Guo, Chengcheng, Zhang, Xiangheng, Liang, Lun, Yu, Chengwei, Mou, Yanhao, Jiang, Yu, Li, Houde, Sugarman, Eric, Deek, Rebecca A, Chen, Zexin, Li, Tao, Chen, Yaohui, Yao, Maojin, Chen, Likun, Liu, Lunxu, Zhang, Gao, Mou, Yonggao
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Lung cancer brain metastases (LC-BrMs) are frequently associated with dismal mortality rates in patients with lung cancer; however, standard of care therapies for LC-BrMs are still limited in their efficacy. A deep understanding of molecular mechanisms and tumor microenvironment of LC-BrMs will provide us with new insights into developing novel therapeutics for treating patients with LC-BrMs. Here, we performed integrated analyses of genomic, transcriptomic, proteomic, metabolomic, and single-cell RNA sequencing data which were derived from a total number of 154 patients with paired and unpaired primary lung cancer and LC-BrM, spanning four published and two newly generated patient cohorts on both bulk and single cell levels. We uncovered that LC-BrMs exhibited a significantly greater intra-tumor heterogeneity. We also observed that mutations in a subset of genes were almost always shared by both primary lung cancers and LC-BrM lesions, including TTN, TP53, MUC16, LRP1B, RYR2, and EGFR. In addition, the genome-wide landscape of somatic copy number alterations was similar between primary lung cancers and LC-BrM lesions. Nevertheless, several regions of focal amplification were significantly enriched in LC-BrMs, including 5p15.33 and 20q13.33. Intriguingly, integrated analyses of transcriptomic, proteomic, and metabolomic data revealed mitochondrial-specific metabolism was activated but tumor immune microenvironment was suppressed in LC-BrMs. Subsequently, we validated our results by conducting real-time quantitative reverse transcription PCR experiments, immunohistochemistry, and multiplexed immunofluorescence staining of patients' paired tumor specimens. Therapeutically, targeting oxidative phosphorylation with gamitrinib in patient-derived organoids of LC-BrMs induced apoptosis and inhibited cell proliferation. The combination of gamitrinib plus anti-PD-1 immunotherapy significantly improved survival of mice bearing LC-BrMs. Patients with a higher expression of mitochondrial metabolism genes but a lower expression of immune genes in their LC-BrM lesions tended to have a worse survival outcome. In conclusion, our findings not only provide comprehensive and integrated perspectives of molecular underpinnings of LC-BrMs but also contribute to the development of a potential, rationale-based combinatorial therapeutic strategy with the goal of translating it into clinical trials for patients with LC-BrMs.
ISSN:1756-994X
1756-994X
DOI:10.1186/s13073-024-01410-8