The application of immunotherapy in gastrointestinal (GI) cancers remains challenging because of the limited response rate and emerging therapeutic resistance. Combining clinical cohorts, multi-omics study, and functional/molecular experiments, it is found that ANO1 amplification or high-expression predicts poor outcomes and resistance to immunotherapy for GI cancer patients. Knocking-down or inhibiting ANO1 suppresses the growth/metastasis/invasion of multiple GI cancer cell lines, cell-derived xenograft, and patient-derived xenograft models. ANO1 contributes to an immune-suppressive tumor microenvironment and induces acquired resistance to anti-PD-1 immunotherapy, while ANO1 knockdown or inhibition enhances immunotherapeutic effectiveness and overcomes resistance to immunotherapy. Mechanistically, through inhibiting cancer ferroptosis in a PI3K-Akt signaling-dependent manner, ANO1 enhances tumor progression and facilitates cancer-associated fibroblast recruitment by promoting TGF-β release, thus crippling CD8 T cell-mediated anti-tumor immunity and generating resistance to immunotherapy. This work highlights ANO1's role in mediating tumor immune microenvironment remodeling and immunotherapeutic resistance, and introduces ANO1 as a promising target for GI cancers' precision treatment.
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http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10460848 | PMC |
http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/advs.202300881 | DOI Listing |
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