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Statin shapes inflamed tumor microenvironment and enhances immune checkpoint blockade in non–small cell lung cancer
Wenjun Mao, Yun Cai, Danrong Chen, Guanyu Jiang, Yongrui Xu, Ruo Chen, Fengxu Wang, Xuehai Wang, Mingfeng Zheng, Xinyuan Zhao, Jie Mei
Wenjun Mao, Yun Cai, Danrong Chen, Guanyu Jiang, Yongrui Xu, Ruo Chen, Fengxu Wang, Xuehai Wang, Mingfeng Zheng, Xinyuan Zhao, Jie Mei
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Research Article Metabolism Oncology

Statin shapes inflamed tumor microenvironment and enhances immune checkpoint blockade in non–small cell lung cancer

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Abstract

Immune checkpoint blockade (ICB) therapy has achieved breakthroughs in the treatment of advanced non–small cell lung cancer (NSCLC). Nevertheless, the low response due to immuno-cold (i.e., tumors with limited tumor-infiltrating lymphocytes) tumor microenvironment (TME) largely limits the application of ICB therapy. Based on the glycolytic/cholesterol synthesis axis, a stratification framework for EGFR-WT NSCLC was developed to summarize the metabolic features of immuno-cold and immuno-hot tumors. The cholesterol subgroup displays the worst prognosis in immuno-cold NSCLC, with significant enrichment of the cholesterol gene signature, indicating that targeting cholesterol synthesis is essential for the therapy for immuno-cold NSCLC. Statin, the inhibitor for cholesterol synthesis, can suppress the aggressiveness of NSCLC in vitro and in vivo and can also drastically reverse the phenotype of immuno-cold to an inflamed phenotype in vivo. This change led to a higher response to ICB therapy. Moreover, both our in-house data and meta-analysis further support that statin can significantly enhance ICB efficacy. In terms of preliminary mechanisms, statin could transcriptionally inhibit PD-L1 expression and induce ferroptosis in NSCLC cells. Overall, we reveal the significance of cholesterol synthesis in NSCLC and demonstrate the improved therapeutic efficacy of ICB in combination with statin. These findings could provide a clinical insight to treat NSCLC patients with immuno-cold tumors.

Authors

Wenjun Mao, Yun Cai, Danrong Chen, Guanyu Jiang, Yongrui Xu, Ruo Chen, Fengxu Wang, Xuehai Wang, Mingfeng Zheng, Xinyuan Zhao, Jie Mei

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Figure 6

Statin induces cell ferroptosis in NSCLC.

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Statin induces cell ferroptosis in NSCLC.
(A) The protein expressions of...
(A) The protein expressions of GPX4 and COX2 in control and statin-treated (5/10 μM, 72 hours) NSCLC cells were investigated by Western blotting. (B) Lipid peroxidation in control and statin-treated NSCLC cells was examined by BODIPY 581/591 C11 probe. (C) The protein expressions of GPX4 and COX2 in control, statin-treated (10 μM, 72 hours), and fer-1–treated (10 μM, 72 hours) NSCLC cells were examined by Western blotting. (D) Representative images showing GPX4 expression in tumor tissues with PBS, lovastatin, anti–PD-1 antibody, and the combination, as well as semiquantitative analysis (n = 5). Total original magnification, 400×. Data are presented as mean ± SD. Significance was calculated with 1-way ANOVA with Tukey’s multiple-comparison test.**P < 0.01.

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