4.8 Article

An Immunogenic Model of KRAS-Mutant Lung Cancer Enables Evaluation of Targeted Therapy and Immunotherapy Combinations

Journal

CANCER RESEARCH
Volume 82, Issue 19, Pages 3435-3448

Publisher

AMER ASSOC CANCER RESEARCH
DOI: 10.1158/0008-5472.CAN-22-0325

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Funding

  1. Francis Crick Institute from Cancer Research UK [FC001070]
  2. UK Medical Research Council [FC001070]
  3. Wellcome Trust from the European Research Council Advanced Grant RASImmune [FC001070]
  4. Wellcome Trust Senior Investigator Award [103799/Z/14/Z]
  5. National Cancer Institute [P01-CA234228]
  6. Team Judy
  7. Randy Shaver Cancer Research and Community Fund
  8. University of Minnesota Masonic Cancer Center
  9. College of Biological Sciences
  10. European Union [703228]
  11. Marie Curie Actions (MSCA) [703228] Funding Source: Marie Curie Actions (MSCA)
  12. Wellcome Trust [103799/Z/14/Z] Funding Source: Wellcome Trust

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This study develops a mouse model of immunogenic KRAS-mutant lung cancer to facilitate the investigation of optimal combinations of targeted therapies with immunotherapies.
Mutations in oncogenes such as KRAS and EGFR cause a high proportion of lung cancers. Drugs targeting these proteins cause tumor regression but ultimately fail to elicit cures. As a result, there is an intense interest in how to best combine targeted therapies with other treatments, such as immunotherapies. However, preclinical systems for studying the interaction of lung tumors with the host immune system are inadequate, in part due to the low tumor mutational burden in genetically engineered mouse models. Here we set out to develop mouse models of mutant KRAS-driven lung cancer with an elevated tumor mutational burden by expressing the human DNA cytosine deaminase, APOBEC3B, to mimic the mutational signature seen in human lung cancer. This failed to substantially increase clonal tumor mutational burden and autochthonous lishing clonal cell lines from these tumors enabled the generation of an immunogenic syngeneic transplantation model of KRAS-mutant lung adenocarcinoma that was sensitive to immunotherapy. Unex-pectedly, antitumor immune responses were not directed against neoantigens but instead targeted derepressed endogenous retroviral antigens. The ability of KRASG12C inhibitors to cause regression of KRASG12C-expressing tumors was markedly potentiated by the adaptive immune system, highlighting the importance of using immunocompetent models for evaluating targeted therapies. Over-all, this model provides a unique opportunity for the study of combinations of targeted and immunotherapies in immune-hot lung cancer. Significance: This study develops a mouse model of immuno-genic KRAS-mutant lung cancer to facilitate the investigation of optimal combinations of targeted therapies with immunotherapies.

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