1. Academic Validation
  2. Peristromal niches protect lung cancers from targeted therapies through a combined effect of multiple molecular mediators

Peristromal niches protect lung cancers from targeted therapies through a combined effect of multiple molecular mediators

  • bioRxiv. 2024 Apr 25:2024.04.24.590626. doi: 10.1101/2024.04.24.590626.
Bina Desai Tatiana Miti Sandhya Prabhakaran Daria Miroshnychenko Menkara Henry Viktoriya Marusyk Chandler Gatenbee Marylin Bui Jacob Scott Philipp M Altrock Eric Haura Alexander R A Anderson David Basanta Andriy Marusyk
Abstract

Targeted therapies directed against oncogenic signaling addictions, such as inhibitors of ALK in ALK+ NSCLC often induce strong and durable clinical responses. However, they are not curative in metastatic cancers, as some tumor cells persist through therapy, eventually developing resistance. Therapy sensitivity can reflect not only cell-intrinsic mechanisms but also inputs from stromal microenvironment. Yet, the contribution of tumor stroma to therapeutic responses in vivo remains poorly defined. To address this gap of knowledge, we assessed the contribution of stroma-mediated resistance to therapeutic responses to the frontline ALK inhibitor alectinib in xenograft models of ALK+ NSCLC. We found that stroma-proximal tumor cells are partially protected against cytostatic effects of alectinib. This effect is observed not only in remission, but also during relapse, indicating the strong contribution of stroma-mediated resistance to both persistence and resistance. This therapy-protective effect of the stromal niche reflects a combined action of multiple mechanisms, including growth factors and extracellular matrix components. Consequently, despite improving alectinib responses, suppression of any individual resistance mechanism was insufficient to fully overcome the protective effect of stroma. Focusing on shared collateral sensitivity of persisters offered a superior therapeutic benefit, especially when using an antibody-drug conjugate with bystander effect to limit therapeutic escape. These findings indicate that stroma-mediated resistance might be the major contributor to both residual and progressing disease and highlight the limitation of focusing on suppressing a single resistance mechanism at a time.

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