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Tyrosine kinase signalling within cancer cells is central to the establishment of an immunosuppressive microenvironment. Although tyrosine kinase inhibitors act, in part, to augment adaptive immunity, the increased heterogeneity and functional redundancy of the tyrosine kinome is a hurdle to achieving durable responses to immunotherapies. We previously identified the Shc1 (ShcA) scaffold, a central regulator of tyrosine kinase signalling, as essential for promoting breast cancer immune suppression. Herein we show that the ShcA pathway simultaneously activates STAT3 immunosuppressive signals and impairs STAT1-driven immune surveillance in breast cancer cells. Impaired Y239/Y240-ShcA phosphorylation selectively reduces STAT3 activation in breast tumours, profoundly sensitizing them to immune checkpoint inhibitors and tumour vaccines. Finally, the ability of diminished tyrosine kinase signalling to initiate STAT1-driven immune surveillance can be overcome by compensatory STAT3 hyperactivation in breast tumours. Our data indicate that inhibition of pY239/240-ShcA-dependent STAT3 signalling may represent an attractive therapeutic strategy to sensitize breast tumours to multiple immunotherapies.
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Ryuhjin Ahn
Center for Cancer Research
Valérie Sabourin
McGill University
Alicia M. Bolt
University of New Mexico
SHILAP Revista de lepidopterología
Nature Communications
McGill University
Lunenfeld-Tanenbaum Research Institute
Sinai Health System
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Ahn et al. (Thu,) studied this question.
synapsesocial.com/papers/69d76b7eb1cb92dd1bb8b17e — DOI: https://doi.org/10.1038/ncomms14638
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