Genomic instability is a hallmark of neoplastic transformation that leads to the accumulation of mutations, and generates a state of replicative stress in neoplastic cells associated with dysregulated DNA damage repair (DDR) responses. The importance of increasing mutations in driving cancer progression is well established, whereas relatively little attention has been devoted to the DNA displaced to the cytosol of cancer cells, a byproduct of genomic instability and of the ensuing DDR response. The presence of DNA in the cytosol promotes the activation of viral defense pathways in all cells, leading to activation of innate and adaptive immune responses. In fact, the improper accumulation of cytosolic DNA in normal cells is known to drive severe autoimmune pathology. Thus, cancer cells must evade cytoplasmic DNA detection pathways to avoid immune-mediated destruction. The main sensor for cytoplasmic DNA is the cyclic GMP–AMP synthase, cGAS. Upon activation by cytosolic DNA, cGAS catalyzes the formation of the second messenger cGAMP, which activates STING (stimulator of IFN genes), leading to the production of type I interferon (IFN-I). IFN-I is a critical effector of cell-mediated antiviral and antitumor immunity, and its production by cancer cells can be subverted by several mechanisms. However, the key upstream regulator of cytosolic DNA-mediated immune stimulation is the DNA exonuclease 3′-repair exonuclease 1 (TREX1). Here, we will discuss evidence in support of a role of TREX1 as an immune checkpoint that, when up-regulated, hinders the development of antitumor immune responses.
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Cover Image
Cover Image
Mapping gene signatures according to their expression in different immune landscapes of breast (BRCA), lung (LUAD) and colon (COAD) carcinoma, and melanoma (SKCM); signatures selectively expressed in the immune-active (ICR4) landscape are shown in red, those selectively expressed in the immune-silent (ICR1) landscape are shown as blue and those that are ubiquitously expressed independent of immune landscape are white. The image is based on Figure 1 in this issue's opening article (Lu et al., pages 411–419) in which the authors look at how cancer cells go through a conserved evolutionary bottleneck facing a Two-Option Choice to evade recognition by the immune competent host: they can either adopt a clean oncogenic process devoid of immunogenic stimuli (immune-silent tumors) or display an entropic biology prone to immune recognition (immune-active tumors).
TREX1 is a checkpoint for innate immune sensing of DNA damage that fosters cancer immune resistance Available to Purchase
Francesco M. Marincola, Sandra Demaria, Claire Vanpouille-Box; TREX1 is a checkpoint for innate immune sensing of DNA damage that fosters cancer immune resistance. Emerg Top Life Sci 12 December 2017; 1 (5): 509–515. doi: https://doi.org/10.1042/ETLS20170063
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