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Supplementary Figure 7 from Dasatinib Remodels the Tumor Microenvironment and Sensitizes Small Cell Lung Cancer to Immunotherapy

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posted on 2025-10-15, 07:20 authored by Esther Redin, Nerea Otegui, Mirentxu Santos, Sergio Leon, Miriam Redrado, Diego Serrano, Eva Fernandez de Pierola, Joan Salvador Russo-Cabrera, Irene Ferrer, Maria Olmedo, Angel Diaz-Lagares, Maeva Houry, Silve Vicent, Anna Vilalta, Patricia Mondelo-Macía, Jorge García-González, Luis León-Mateos, Alvaro Gonzalez, Luis Paz-Ares, Rafael López, Miguel F. Sanmamed, Luis Montuenga, Alfonso Calvo
<p>Supplementary Figure 7</p>

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Instituto de Salud Carlos III (ISCIII)

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ARTICLE ABSTRACT

Effective strategies to reinvigorate the immune system are needed to improve outcomes in small cell lung cancer (SCLC). Targeting Src family kinases with dasatinib (Dasa) can elicit immunomodulatory effects in some cancer types. In this study, we explored the potential of combining Dasa with immune checkpoint blockade in SCLC. Although the SCLC models were refractory to anti–PD-1 or anti-CTLA4 monotherapy, anti–PD-1 and anti-CTLA4 combination immunotherapy (ITc) induced a significant antitumor response. Furthermore, the Dasa + ITc combination was superior to ITc or Dasa alone. Dasa + ITc activity was mediated by CD4+ T cells, MHC-II+ antigen-presenting cells, and NK cells, as depletion of these populations impeded the combination treatment antitumor efficacy. Increased tumor infiltration of CD4+ and CD8+ T cells, NK cells, M1-like macrophages, and CD11c+ antigen-presenting cells and a reduction of regulatory T cells and M2-like macrophages were found in Dasa + ITc–treated mice. Dasa increased CCL5 in NK cells and reduced regulatory T-cell conversion from CD4+ lymphocytes. Dasa + ITc therapy elicited robust antitumor efficacy in three-dimensional cocultures of immune and SCLC cells. In vivo experiments showed that CCL5 was necessary for the Dasa + ITc response. In immunotherapy-treated patients with SCLC, a gene signature including CD4, CIITA, and tumor mutational burden predicted good prognosis. On-treatment CCL5 plasma levels were increased only in patients with long progression-free survival, and pretreatment secretomics identified cytokines related to myeloid cells significantly associated with poor prognosis. In summary, combining Dasa with immunotherapy represents a strategy to treat SCLC, with CCL5 as a cytokine that could serve to monitor response. Multikinase inhibitor and immune checkpoint blockade combination therapy overcomes the immunosuppressive tumor microenvironment in small cell lung cancer by activating CCL5 and costimulating CD4+ T cells, NK cells, and MHC-II+ cells.

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