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1.
Cancer Cell ; 41(4): 791-806.e4, 2023 04 10.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37037616

ABSTRACT

Immune checkpoint inhibitors (ICIs), including CTLA-4- and PD-1-blocking antibodies, can have profound effects on tumor immune cell infiltration that have not been consistent in biopsy series reported to date. Here, we analyze seven molecular datasets of samples from patients with advanced melanoma (N = 514) treated with ICI agents to investigate clinical, genomic, and transcriptomic features of anti-PD-1 response in cutaneous melanoma. We find that prior anti-CTLA-4 therapy is associated with differences in genomic, individual gene, and gene signatures in anti-PD-1 responders. Anti-CTLA-4-experienced melanoma tumors that respond to PD-1 blockade exhibit increased tumor mutational burden, inflammatory signatures, and altered cell cycle processes compared with anti-CTLA-4-naive tumors or anti-CTLA-4-experienced, anti-PD-1-nonresponsive melanoma tumors. We report a harmonized, aggregate resource and suggest that prior CTLA-4 blockade therapy is associated with marked differences in the tumor microenvironment that impact the predictive features of PD-1 blockade therapy response.


Subject(s)
Melanoma , Skin Neoplasms , Humans , Melanoma/drug therapy , Melanoma/genetics , Melanoma/metabolism , Skin Neoplasms/drug therapy , Skin Neoplasms/genetics , CTLA-4 Antigen/genetics , Biomarkers, Tumor , Immunotherapy , Tumor Microenvironment
2.
Mol Syst Biol ; 5: 288, 2009.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-19638969

ABSTRACT

Although RNA-binding proteins (RBPs) coordinate many key decisions during cell growth and differentiation, the dynamics of RNA-RBP interactions have not been extensively studied on a global basis. We immunoprecipitated endogenous ribonucleoprotein complexes containing HuR and PABP throughout a T-cell activation time course and identified the associated mRNA populations using microarrays. We used Gaussian mixture modeling as a discriminative model, treating RBP association as a discrete variable (target or not target), and as a generative model, treating RBP-association as a continuous variable (probability of association). We report that HuR interacts with different populations of mRNAs during T-cell activation. These populations encode functionally related proteins that are members of the Wnt pathway and proteins mediating T-cell receptor signaling pathways. Moreover, the mRNA targets of HuR were found to overlap with the targets of other posttranscriptional regulatory factors, indicating combinatorial interdependence of posttranscriptional regulatory networks and modules after activation. Applying HuR mRNA dynamics as a quantitative phenotype in the drug-gene-phenotype Connectivity Map, we identified candidate small molecule effectors of HuR and T-cell activation. We show that one of these candidates, resveratrol, exerts T-cell activation-dependent posttranscriptional effects that are rescued by HuR. Thus, we describe a strategy to systematically link an RBP and condition-specific posttranscriptional effects to small molecule drugs.


Subject(s)
Lymphocyte Activation/genetics , RNA, Messenger/analysis , T-Lymphocytes/immunology , Antigens, Surface/metabolism , ELAV Proteins , ELAV-Like Protein 1 , Gene Expression Regulation , Humans , Jurkat Cells , Kinetics , Oligonucleotide Array Sequence Analysis , Poly(A)-Binding Proteins/metabolism , RNA-Binding Proteins/metabolism , Resveratrol , Ribonucleoproteins/metabolism , Stilbenes/pharmacology
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