Aurora A kinase inhibition induces accumulation of SCLC tumor cells in mitosis with restored interferon signaling to increase response to PD-L1.

Yixiang Li,Navin R Mahadevan, Leslie Duplaquet,Deli Hong, Yavuz T Durmaz, Kristen L Jones, Hyeonseo Cho,Murry Morrow, Andrea Protti,Michael J Poitras, Benjamin F Springer, Roderick T Bronson,Xueqian Gong, Yu-Hua Hui,Jian Du, Jackson Southard,Tran Thai, Shuqiang Li, Patrick H Lizotte,Prafulla C Gokhale, Quang-De Nguyen,Matthew G Oser

Cell reports. Medicine(2023)

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摘要
Despite small cell lung cancers (SCLCs) having a high mutational burden, programmed death-ligand 1 (PD-L1) immunotherapy only modestly increases survival. A subset of SCLCs that lose their ASCL1 neuroendocrine phenotype and restore innate immune signaling (termed the "inflammatory" subtype) have durable responses to PD-L1. Some SCLCs are highly sensitive to Aurora kinase inhibitors, but early-phase trials show short-lived responses, suggesting effective therapeutic combinations are needed to increase their durability. Using immunocompetent SCLC genetically engineered mouse models (GEMMs) and syngeneic xenografts, we show durable efficacy with the combination of a highly specific Aurora A kinase inhibitor (LSN3321213) and PD-L1. LSN3321213 causes accumulation of tumor cells in mitosis with lower ASCL1 expression and higher expression of interferon target genes and antigen-presentation genes mimicking the inflammatory subtype in a cell-cycle-dependent manner. These data demonstrate that inflammatory gene expression is restored in mitosis in SCLC, which can be exploited by Aurora A kinase inhibition.
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