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Poster session 18

1468P - cGAS-driven inflammation in chromosomally unstable oesophagogastric adenocarcinoma

Date

14 Sep 2024

Session

Poster session 18

Topics

Tumour Immunology;  Translational Research

Tumour Site

Oesophageal Cancer;  Gastric Cancer;  Gastro-Oesophageal Junction Cancer

Presenters

Eileen Parkes

Citation

Annals of Oncology (2024) 35 (suppl_2): S878-S912. 10.1016/annonc/annonc1603

Authors

E.E. Parkes1, E. Erdal2, P. Shah3, R. Clark1, S. Clarke1, A. Carter1, F. Foijer4, E. Hammond5, B. Izar6, B. Beernaert1

Author affiliations

  • 1 Oncology Department, University of Oxford, OX3 7DQ - Oxford/GB
  • 2 Department Of Oncology, UKE Universitätsklinikum Hamburg-Eppendorf KMTZ, 20246 - Hamburg/DE
  • 3 Himc, CUIMC - Columbia University Irving Medical Center, 10032 - New York/US
  • 4 Laboratory Of Genomic Instability In Development And Disease, The University Medical Center - UMCG, 9713 AV - Groningen/NL
  • 5 Department Of Oncology, University of Oxford, OX3 7DQ - Oxford/GB
  • 6 630 W 168th Street, William Black Building, Office 1706d, Columbia University, 11375 - New York/US

Resources

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Abstract 1468P

Background

Oesophageal adenocarcinoma (OAC) is characterised by chromosomal instability (CIN) resulting in therapeutic resistance and metastasis. CIN in cancers results in formation of micronuclei and subsequent activation of cGAS-STING signalling pathway. However, how chronic cGAS activation is tolerated and impacts the tumour landscape of CINhigh OAC is poorly understood.

Methods

We developed novel OAC cell lines and cGASKO cells for transcriptomic profiling. Multiplex immunfluorescence was performed on pre-neoadjuvant chemotherapy biopsies and resection specimens for cGAS/STING and myeloid infiltration. Co-culture experiments used PBMCs and conditioned media. Single-nuclei RNA-seq data was obtained from n=3 CINhigh and n=3 CINlow tumour biopsies stratified by cGAS+ micronuclei score.

Results

Transcriptomic profiling demonstrated that both chronic and transient CIN-driven cGAS-STING activation converge on the expression of CXCR1/2 ligands and other pro-inflammatory cytokines and chemokines rather than typical anti-tumor type I interferon signalling in OAC cells. Indeed, a novel transcriptional signature of cGAS+ micronuclear burden-correlated genes correlates with orthogonal measures of CIN in OAC tumours and is associated with an enrichment in myeloid-derived cells as well as poor prognosis. Correspondingly, using multiplexed immunofluorescence (IF) we find that a high preponderance of cGAS+MN and STING expression in human OAC samples is associated with decreased tumor purity, increased myeloid cell and macrophage infiltration, distinct extracellular matrix and increased peripheral blood neutrophil counts, indicative of tumor-promoting myeloid inflammation. snRNAseq revealed upregulation of inflammatory signalling in CINhigh tumours with distinct myeloid and fibroblast phenotypes.

Conclusions

Ongoing snRNAseq analysis will characterise the CIN- and cGAS-STING-dependent cell-cell interactions that govern it. Taken together, our findings provide an explanation for the observed maintenance of cGAS and STING in OAC and identify disruption of cGAS-STING-dependent myeloid cell inflammation and recruitment as a potential therapeutic target for CINhigh OAC.

Clinical trial identification

Editorial acknowledgement

Legal entity responsible for the study

The authors.

Funding

Cancer Research UK; Wellcome Trust; BRC.

Disclosure

All authors have declared no conflicts of interest.

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