An in vivo inflammatory loop potentiates KRAS blockade

2019 
KRAS inhibitors perform inferior to other targeted drugs in vitro and fail clinical trials. To investigate a possible reason for this, we treated human and murine tumor cells with KRAS inhibitors deltarasin (targeting phosphodiesterase-δ), cysmethynil (targeting isoprenylcysteine carboxylmethyltransferase), and AA12 (targeting KRASG12C), and silenced/overexpressed mutant KRAS using custom-designed vectors. We show that KRAS-mutant tumor cells exclusively respond to KRAS blockade in vivo, because the oncogene co-opts host myeloid cells via a C-C-motif chemokine ligand 2/interleukin-1β-mediated signaling loop for sustained tumorigenicity. Indeed, KRAS-mutant tumors did not respond to deltarasin in Ccr2 and Il1b gene-deficient mice, but were deltarasin-sensitive in wild-type and Ccr2-deficient mice adoptively transplanted with wild-type murine bone marrow. A KRAS-dependent pro-inflammatory transcriptome was prominent in human cancers with high KRAS mutation prevalence and predicted poor survival. Our findings support that in vitro cellular systems are suboptimal for anti-KRAS drug screens since the latter drugs function to suppress interleukin-1 receptor 1 expression and myeloid IL-1β-delivered pro-growth effects in vivo. Moreover the findings support that interleukin-1β blockade might be suitable for the therapy of KRAS-mutant cancers.
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