Impaired TGF-β signaling via AHNAK family mutations elicits an esophageal cancer subtype with sensitivities to genotoxic therapy and immunotherapy

Background Genome instability (GI) is a hallmark of esophageal squamous cell carcinoma (ESCC) while factors affecting GI remain unclear. Methods Here, we aimed to characterize genomic events representing specific mechanisms of GI based on 201 ESCC samples and validated our findings at the patient, s...

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Veröffentlicht in:Cancer immunology, immunotherapy immunotherapy, 2024-09, Vol.73 (11), p.225, Article 225
Hauptverfasser: Mai, Zihang, Kongjia, Luo, Wang, Xinye, Xie, Xiuying, Pang, Lanlan, Yang, Hong, Wen, Jing, Fu, Jianhua
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Background Genome instability (GI) is a hallmark of esophageal squamous cell carcinoma (ESCC) while factors affecting GI remain unclear. Methods Here, we aimed to characterize genomic events representing specific mechanisms of GI based on 201 ESCC samples and validated our findings at the patient, single-cell and cancer cell-line levels, including a newly generated multi-omics dataset of the trial NCT04006041. Results A two-gene (AHNAK and AHNAK2) mutation signature was identified to define the “AHNAK1/2-mutant” cancer subtype. Single-cell-assisted multi-omics analysis showed that this subtype had a higher neoantigen load, active antigen presentation, and proficient CD8 + T cell infiltrations, which were validated at pan-cancer levels. Mechanistically, AHNAK1/2-mutant ESCC was characterized by impaired response of TGF-β and the inefficient alternative end-join repair (Alt-EJ) that might promote GI. Knockdown of AHNAK in ESCC cell lines resulted in more Alt-EJ events and increased sensitivities to cisplatin. Furthermore, this two-gene signature accurately predicted better responses to DNA-damaging therapy in various clinical settings (HR ≈ 0.25). The two-gene signature predicted higher pCR rates in ESCCs receiving neoadjuvant immunotherapy-involved treatment. Finally, a molecular classification scheme was built and outperformed established molecular typing models in the prognosis stratification of ESCC patients. Conclusion Our study extended our understanding of the AHNAK family in promoting GI and selecting treatment responders of ESCC.
ISSN:1432-0851
0340-7004
1432-0851
DOI:10.1007/s00262-024-03798-z