Endogenous retrovirus activation as a key mechanism of anti-tumor immune response in radiotherapy

AK Lee, D Pan, X Bao, M Hu, F Li… - Radiation …, 2020 - meridian.allenpress.com
AK Lee, D Pan, X Bao, M Hu, F Li, CY Li
Radiation research, 2020meridian.allenpress.com
The generation of DNA double-strand breaks has historically been taught as the mechanism
through which radiotherapy kills cancer cells. Recently, radiation-induced cytosolic DNA
release and activation of the cGAS/STING pathway, with ensuing induction of interferon
secretion and immune activation, have been recognized as important mechanisms for
radiation-mediated anti-tumor efficacy. Here we demonstrate that radiation-induced
activation of endogenous retroviruses (ERVs) also plays a major role in regulating the anti …
The generation of DNA double-strand breaks has historically been taught as the mechanism through which radiotherapy kills cancer cells. Recently, radiation-induced cytosolic DNA release and activation of the cGAS/STING pathway, with ensuing induction of interferon secretion and immune activation, have been recognized as important mechanisms for radiation-mediated anti-tumor efficacy. Here we demonstrate that radiation-induced activation of endogenous retroviruses (ERVs) also plays a major role in regulating the anti-tumor immune response during irradiation. Radiation-induced ERV-associated dsRNA transcription and subsequent activation of the innate antiviral MDA5/MAVS/TBK1 pathway led to downstream transcription of interferon-stimulated genes. Additionally, genetic knockout of KAP1, a chromatin modulator responsible for suppressing ERV transcription sites within the genome, enhanced the effect of radiation-induced anti-tumor response in vivo in two different tumor models. This anti-tumor response was immune-mediated and required an intact host immune system. Our findings indicate that radiation-induced ERV-dsRNA expression and subsequent immune response play critical roles in clinical radiotherapy, and manipulation of epigenetic regulators and the dsRNA-sensing innate immunity pathway could be promising targets to enhance the efficacy of radiotherapy and cancer immunotherapy.
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