The long non-coding RNA LINC01133 as a novel determinant of immune evasion in triple-negative breast cancer

NIH RePORTER · VA · I01 · · view on reporter.nih.gov ↗

Abstract

Triple-negative breast cancers (TNBCs) afflict younger women of African and Latino descent, present with aggressive clinical behavior, and are in their majority unresponsive to systemic treatments. Patients with refractory disease exhibit dismal survival rates with reliable therapies still undefined. To identify novel, disease- relevant therapeutic targets, we conducted transcriptomic analyses of highly metastatic and tumor-initiating TNBC cells, focusing specifically on long non-coding RNAs (lncRNAs), an emerging RNA family with pleiotropic contributions to essential cellular processes. These efforts identified the lncRNA LINC01133, which we found induced malignant tumor development by promoting the expansion of cancer stem cells (CSCs): tumor-initiating cells at the origin of metastasis and therapy resistance. Importantly, LINC01133 associated tightly with clinical TNBC and prognosticated poor patient survival. Further, LINC01133 expression, on its own, promoted cancer growth in vitro and tumorigenesis in vivo. Importantly, LINC01133 inhibition by anti-sense oligonucleotides (ASO) inhibited cancer cell growth, altogether ascribing LINC01133 critical role as a credible therapeutic target in TNBC. Interestingly, LINC01133 exerted additional, paracrine activities that regulated how TNBC cells interfaced with the tumor immune microenvironment (TIME). Indeed, LINC01133-generated syngeneic murine mammary tumors exhibited evident immune-suppressed phenotypes with increased myeloid-derived suppressor cells, M2 macrophages, and anergized 2B4+CD3+ T-cells, concomitant with striking PD-L1 induction in LINC01133-cancer cells. These results allow us to hypothesize that LINC01133 regulated immune evasion, in addition to CSC genesis, representing an opportune and novel dual target in immuno-oncology, and our objective is to verify these notions using three concerted aims. In Aim1, we will determine how LINC01133 promotes the expression of the checkpoint protein PD-L1 by probing the molecular events that foster PD-L1 accumulation (1.1), and by delineating the direct proximal molecular networks through which LINC01133 regulates PD-L1 expression (1.2 and 1.3). In Aim2, we will comprehensively determine the TIME constituents in LINC01133-expressing syngeneic immune-competent murine TNBC models using FACS and immunohistochemistry (IHC) (2.1). Then, we will use ex vivo phenotypic and functional assays to determine the extent to which tumor-purified infiltrating lymphocytes are exhausted/anergized in LINC01133- expressing tumors (2.2) and determine LINC01133 impact on metastasis (2.3). To clinically validate these findings, we will use quantitative PCR on cancer cells laser-captured from TNBC specimens to determine if LINC0113 levels correlate with patient metastasis and survival history and/or IHC-determined T-cell-specific exhaustion phenotypes in their tumors (2.4). In Aim 3, we will determine if LINC01133 inhibition stunts tumor/metastasis growth by reawakening ...

Key facts

NIH application ID
10586976
Project number
1I01BX005980-01A1
Recipient
VA BOSTON HEALTH CARE SYSTEM
Principal Investigator
Antoine Elias Karnoub
Activity code
I01
Funding institute
VA
Fiscal year
2024
Award amount
Award type
1
Project period
2024-01-01 → 2027-12-31