Reprogramming the Tumor Microenvironment in Ovarian Cancer

NIH RePORTER · NIH · R01 · $443,654 · view on reporter.nih.gov ↗

Abstract

PROJECT SUMMARY High-grade serous ovarian cancer (HGSOC) is the leading cause of death from gynecologic malignancies. Most patients initially respond to chemotherapy after surgery, yet ~80% will recur with disease that becomes resistant to treatment. Immune therapies have shown great promise, but with limited efficacy in HGSOC. The HGSOC tumor microenvironment (TME) is highly immuno-suppressive and this is hypothesized to promote tumor immune evasion. We have developed two new implantable syngeneic mouse ovarian tumor models that will allow for the molecular analysis of tumor- and host-specific signals driving immune evasion. By selecting for aggressive growth in mice, we have extensively characterized KMF cells (gains in genes for KRas, Myc, and FAK) that exhibit many phenotypic similarities to HGSOC; intrinsic chemo-resistance and potent immune suppression. We will focus on FAK (focal adhesion kinase), a tyrosine kinase canonically supporting cell motility signaling. FAK is the fifth highest amplified gene in HGSOC and greater than 65% of patients exhibit elevated FAK mRNA with poor prognostic significance. Using pharmacological FAK inhibitors, FAK knockout, FAK re-expression, complementation, and bioinformatic analyses of KMF cells in tumor-bearing mice, we find that FAK drives the expression of a select group of cytokines and tumor-associated surface proteins involved in regulating tumor growth and immune evasion. Inhibiting FAK results in decreased myeloid-derived suppressor cell (MDSC) recruitment, increased CD4 and CD8 T cell tumor infiltration, and decreased expression of PD-L1, CD112, and CD155 checkpoint regulatory proteins on KMF cells in vivo. These changes are consistent with a normalization or reprogramming of the ovarian TME by FAK inhibition in a tumor-intrinsic manner. FAK inhibition also prevents bloody ascites formation in the KMF model. A second newly-developed T antigen-driven FAK floxed mouse ovarian carcinoma model (MOVCAR) revealed that FAK loss prevents tumor growth in syngeneic low-T mice. FAK-null MOVCAR tumors were infiltrated by CD45+ leukocytes, and when evaluated in immune-deficient mice, orthotopic FAK-null MOVCAR tumor growth was enhanced. This proposal will test the hypothesis that tumor-intrinsic FAK activation facilitates immune-suppressive related changes to the TME. Aim-1 will use a new inducible FAK expression system to evaluate FAK nuclear localization- and kinase-dependent signals driving malignancy, chemokine expression, and MDSC recruitment. Aim-2 will test the role CD112/CD155 immune checkpoint protein expression and whether FAK inhibition may combine with antibodies to TIGIT (T cell immunoreceptor with Ig and ITIM domains) to limit tumor growth via effects on T cells. Aim-3 will use an inducible knockout of FAK, of the related Pyk2 kinase (new model), or inducible expression of kinase-inactive FAK in mouse endothelial cells, with the KMF implantable tumor model, to test stromal FAK and Pyk2 signaling o...

Key facts

NIH application ID
10073286
Project number
1R01CA254342-01
Recipient
UNIVERSITY OF CALIFORNIA, SAN DIEGO
Principal Investigator
David D Schlaepfer
Activity code
R01
Funding institute
NIH
Fiscal year
2020
Award amount
$443,654
Award type
1
Project period
2020-07-03 → 2025-06-30