4.6 Article

Multi-omic molecular profiling reveals potentially targetable abnormalities shared across multiple histologies of brain metastasis

Journal

ACTA NEUROPATHOLOGICA
Volume 141, Issue 2, Pages 303-321

Publisher

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s00401-020-02256-1

Keywords

Brain metastasis; Multiple histologies; Molecular profiling; Immunosuppression; Oxidative phosphorylation; Phosphoinositide 3-kinase (PI3K) signaling

Funding

  1. NIH/National Cancer Institute Cancer Center Support Grant [P30 CA016672]
  2. MD Anderson Multidisciplinary Research Program
  3. MD Anderson Multi-investigator Research Program
  4. American Cancer Society-Melanoma Research Alliance Team Award
  5. Taiho Pharmaceutical grant
  6. American Cancer Society
  7. University of Texas MD Anderson Cancer Center
  8. Dr. Miriam and Sheldon G. Adelson Medical Research Foundation
  9. AIM at Melanoma Foundation
  10. Cancer Fighters of Houston
  11. Anne and John Mendelsohn Chair in Cancer Research
  12. Susan G. Komen Career Catalyst Research grant

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Deadly complications of brain metastasis (BM) occur predominantly in a small subset of systemic malignancies due to shared biological mechanisms such as impaired cellular immunity, heightened oxidative phosphorylation, and canonical oncogenic signaling pathways. BM is characterized by T cell depletion, increased oxidative metabolism, and sensitivity to OXPHOS inhibition, indicating potential therapeutic targets for a broad range of systemic cancers.
The deadly complication of brain metastasis (BM) is largely confined to a relatively narrow cross-section of systemic malignancies, suggesting a fundamental role for biological mechanisms shared across commonly brain metastatic tumor types. To identify and characterize such mechanisms, we performed genomic, transcriptional, and proteomic profiling using whole-exome sequencing, mRNA-seq, and reverse-phase protein array analysis in a cohort of the lung, breast, and renal cell carcinomas consisting of BM and patient-matched primary or extracranial metastatic tissues. While no specific genomic alterations were associated with BM, correlations with impaired cellular immunity, upregulated oxidative phosphorylation (OXPHOS), and canonical oncogenic signaling pathways including phosphoinositide 3-kinase (PI3K) signaling, were apparent across multiple tumor histologies. Multiplexed immunofluorescence analysis confirmed significant T cell depletion in BM, indicative of a fundamentally altered immune microenvironment. Moreover, functional studies using in vitro and in vivo modeling demonstrated heightened oxidative metabolism in BM along with sensitivity to OXPHOS inhibition in murine BM models and brain metastatic derivatives relative to isogenic parentals. These findings demonstrate that pathophysiological rewiring of oncogenic signaling, cellular metabolism, and immune microenvironment broadly characterizes BM. Further clarification of this biology will likely reveal promising targets for therapeutic development against BM arising from a broad variety of systemic cancers.

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