Senescent fibroblasts in the tumor stroma rewire lung cancer metabolism and plasticity

Avatar
Poster
Voice is AI-generated
Connected to paperThis paper is a preprint and has not been certified by peer review

Senescent fibroblasts in the tumor stroma rewire lung cancer metabolism and plasticity

Authors

Lee, J.; Nabora, S. R.; Woo, S.-H.; Goel, S.; Stratton, F.; Kuang, C.; Mansfield, A.; LaFave, L.; Peng, T.

Abstract

Senescence has been demonstrated to either inhibit or promote tumorigenesis. Resolving this paradox requires spatial mapping and functional characterization of senescent cells in the native tumor niche. Here, we identified senescent p16Ink4a+ cancer-associated fibroblasts with a secretory phenotype that promotes fatty acid uptake and utilization by aggressive lung adenocarcinoma driven by Kras and p53 mutations. Furthermore, rewiring of lung cancer metabolism by p16Ink4a+ cancer-associated fibroblasts also altered tumor cell identity to a highly plastic/dedifferentiated state associated with progression in murine and human LUAD. Our ex vivo senolytic screening platform identified XL888, a HSP90 inhibitor, that cleared p16Ink4a+ cancer-associated fibroblasts in vivo. XL888 administration after establishment of advanced lung adenocarcinoma significantly reduced tumor burden concurrent with the loss of plastic tumor cells. Our study identified a druggable component of the tumor stroma that fulfills the metabolic requirement of tumor cells to acquire a more aggressive phenotype.

Follow Us on

0 comments

Add comment