Investigator

Qiwei Wang

Assistant Professor · University of Virginia, Microbiology, Immunology and Cancer Biology

Research Interests

QWQiwei Wang
Papers(1)
STING agonism overcom…
Collaborators(1)
Jean J Zhao
Institutions(1)
Dana Farber Cancer In…

Papers

STING agonism overcomes STAT3-mediated immunosuppression and adaptive resistance to PARP inhibition in ovarian cancer

Background Poly (ADP-ribose) polymerase (PARP) inhibition (PARPi) has demonstrated potent therapeutic efficacy in patients with BRCA-mutant ovarian cancer. However, acquired resistance to PARPi remains a major challenge in the clinic. Methods PARPi-resistant ovarian cancer mouse models were generated by long-term treatment of olaparib in syngeneic Brca1-deficient ovarian tumors. Signal transducer and activator of transcription 3 (STAT3)-mediated immunosuppression was investigated in vitro by co-culture experiments and in vivo by analysis of immune cells in the tumor microenvironment (TME) of human and mouse PARPi-resistant tumors. Whole genome transcriptome analysis was performed to assess the antitumor immunomodulatory effect of STING (stimulator of interferon genes) agonists on myeloid cells in the TME of PARPi-resistant ovarian tumors. A STING agonist was used to overcome STAT3-mediated immunosuppression and acquired PARPi resistance in syngeneic and patient-derived xenografts models of ovarian cancer. Results In this study, we uncover an adaptive resistance mechanism to PARP inhibition mediated by tumor-associated macrophages (TAMs) in the TME. Markedly increased populations of protumor macrophages are found in BRCA-deficient ovarian tumors that rendered resistance to PARPi in both murine models and patients. Mechanistically, PARP inhibition elevates the STAT3 signaling pathway in tumor cells, which in turn promotes protumor polarization of TAMs. STAT3 ablation in tumor cells mitigates polarization of protumor macrophages and increases tumor-infiltrating T cells on PARP inhibition. These findings are corroborated in patient-derived, PARPi-resistant BRCA1-mutant ovarian tumors. Importantly, STING agonists reshape the immunosuppressive TME by reprogramming myeloid cells and overcome the TME-dependent adaptive resistance to PARPi in ovarian cancer. This effect is further enhanced by addition of the programmed cell death protein-1 blockade. Conclusions We elucidate an adaptive immunosuppression mechanism rendering resistance to PARPi in BRCA1-mutant ovarian tumors. This is mediated by enrichment of protumor TAMs propelled by PARPi-induced STAT3 activation in tumor cells. We also provide a new strategy to reshape the immunosuppressive TME with STING agonists and overcome PARPi resistance in ovarian cancer.

37Works
1Papers
1Collaborators
Mammary Neoplasms, AnimalCell Line, TumorOvarian NeoplasmsTumor MicroenvironmentCarcinoma, Non-Small-Cell LungLung Neoplasms

Positions

2024–

Assistant Professor

University of Virginia · Microbiology, Immunology and Cancer Biology

2023–

Instructor in Medicine

Dana-Farber Cancer Institute · Cancer Biology/Medical Oncology

2016–

Postdoctoral Research Fellow

Dana-Farber Cancer Institute · Cancer Biology

Education

2016

PhD

University of Wisconsin-Madison · Surgery

2010

Master of Science

Sun Yat-Sen University · Biology

Country

US

Keywords
Immunogenic cell deathMacrophageImmuno-oncologyGenetically modified mouse modelsNecroptosisBreast cancerLung cancerOvarian cancerBRCAHomologous recombinationStimulator of interferon genes (STING)Synthetic lethal