Investigator
Principle Investigator · Shanghai Jiao Tong University, School of Medicine
Therapeutic targeting of CPSF3-dependent transcriptional termination in ovarian cancer
Transcriptional dysregulation is a recurring pathogenic hallmark and an emerging therapeutic vulnerability in ovarian cancer. Here, we demonstrated that ovarian cancer exhibited a unique dependency on the regulatory machinery of transcriptional termination, particularly, cleavage and polyadenylation specificity factor (CPSF) complex. Genetic abrogation of multiple CPSF subunits substantially hampered neoplastic cell viability, and we presented evidence that their indispensable roles converged on the endonuclease CPSF3. Mechanistically, CPSF perturbation resulted in lengthened 3′-untranslated regions, diminished intronic polyadenylation and widespread transcriptional readthrough, and consequently suppressed oncogenic pathways. Furthermore, we reported the development of specific CPSF3 inhibitors building upon the benzoxaborole scaffold, which exerted potent antitumor activity. Notably, CPSF3 blockade effectively exacerbated genomic instability by down-regulating DNA damage repair genes and thus acted in synergy with poly(adenosine 5'-diphosphate–ribose) polymerase inhibition. These findings establish CPSF3-dependent transcriptional termination as an exploitable driving mechanism of ovarian cancer and provide a promising class of boron-containing compounds for targeting transcription-addicted human malignancies.
APOBEC3B stratifies ovarian clear cell carcinoma with distinct immunophenotype and prognosis
Ovarian clear cell carcinoma (OCCC) is a challenging disease due to its intrinsic chemoresistance. Immunotherapy is an emerging treatment option but currently impeded by insufficient understanding of OCCC immunophenotypes and their molecular determinants. Whole-genome sequencing on 23 pathologically confirmed patients was employed to depict the genomic profile of primary OCCCs. APOBEC3B expression and digital pathology-based Immunoscore were assessed by performing immunohistochemistry and correlated with clinical outcomes. An APOBEC-positive (APOBEC+) subtype was identified based on the characteristic mutational signature and prevalent kataegis events. APOBEC + OCCC displayed favourable prognosis across one internal and two external patient cohorts. The improved outcome was ascribable to increased lymphocytic infiltration. Similar phenomena of APOBEC3B expression and T-cell accumulation were observed in endometriotic tissues, suggesting that APOBEC-induced mutagenesis and immunogenicity could occur early during OCCC pathogenesis. Corroborating these results, a case report was presented for an APOBEC + patient demonstrating inflamed tumour microenvironment and clinical response to immune checkpoint blockade. Our findings implicate APOBEC3B as a novel mechanism of OCCC stratification with prognostic value and as a potential predictive biomarker that may inform immunotherapeutic opportunities.
SOX17 and PAX8 constitute an actionable lineage-survival transcriptional complex in ovarian cancer
Müllerian tissue-specific oncogenes, prototyped by PAX8, underlie ovarian tumorigenesis and represent unique molecular vulnerabilities. Further delineating such lineage-dependency factors and associated therapeutic implications would provide valuable insights into ovarian cancer biology and treatment. In this study, we identified SOX17 as a new lineage-survival master transcription factor, which shared co-expression pattern with PAX8 in epithelial ovarian carcinoma. Genetic disruption of SOX17 or PAX8 analogously inhibited neoplastic cell viability and downregulated a spectrum of lineage-related transcripts. Mechanistically, we showed that SOX17 physically interacted with PAX8 in cultured cell lines and clinical tumor specimens. The two nuclear proteins bound to overlapping genomic regions and regulated a common set of downstream genes, including those involved in cell cycle and tissue morphogenesis. In addition, we revealed that small-molecule inhibitors of transcriptional cyclin-dependent kinases (CDKs) effectively reduced SOX17 and PAX8 expression. ZSQ1722, a novel orally bioavailable CDK12/13 covalent antagonist, exerted potent anti-tumor activity in xenograft models. These findings shed light on an actionable lineage-survival transcriptional complex in ovarian cancer, and facilitated drug discovery by generating a serial of candidate compounds to pharmacologically target this difficult-to-treat malignancy.
Baseline immunity and impact of chemotherapy on immune microenvironment in cervical cancer
AbstractBackgroundWe aimed to comprehensively evaluate the immunologic landscape at baseline and upon chemotherapy in cervical cancer. The information should aid ongoing clinical investigations of checkpoint blockade immunotherapies in this disease setting.MethodsA series of 109 cervical carcinoma patients was retrospectively assayed before and after neoadjuvant chemotherapy. Tumour-infiltrating immune markers (CD3, CD4, CD8, CD20, CD56, CD68, PD-1, PD-L1) were assessed by immunohistochemistry. RNA sequencing analysis was performed on matched pre- and post-treatment fresh-frozen tissues.ResultsAt diagnosis, diverse immune cell types including CD20+ B cells, CD3+ T cells, CD56+ natural killer (NK) cells, and CD68+ macrophages were detected in different proportions of cervical carcinoma. Unsupervised hierarchical clustering evidently showed that CD4+ and CD8+ T cell abundance correlated with PD-L1 expression. Based on the immune infiltration patterns, the patients could be stratified into four groups with prognostic relevance, namely, ‘immuno-active’, ‘immuno-medial’, ‘immuno-NK’, and ‘immuno-deficient’. Neoadjuvant chemotherapy was associated with increased CD4, CD8, CD20, and CD56 signals, most prominently in good responders. Transcriptomic data corroborated the improved anticancer immunity and identified immunosuppressive CD200 upregulation following chemotherapeutic intervention.ConclusionsA subset of cervical cancer harbours active immune microenvironment, and chemotherapy treatment may further exert locoregional immunostimulation. Immune checkpoint inhibitors as combination or maintenance therapies warrant future exploration in clinic.
Principle Investigator
Shanghai Jiao Tong University · School of Medicine
Postdoc Fellow
Genentech Inc · Early Drug Discovery
CN