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Ruxolitinib inhibits cyclosporine-induced proliferation of cutaneous squamous cell carcinoma
Melody Abikhair Burgo, Nazanin Roudiani, Jie Chen, Alexis L. Santana, Nicole Doudican, Charlotte Proby, Diane Felsen, John A. Carucci
Melody Abikhair Burgo, Nazanin Roudiani, Jie Chen, Alexis L. Santana, Nicole Doudican, Charlotte Proby, Diane Felsen, John A. Carucci
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Research Article Dermatology Transplantation

Ruxolitinib inhibits cyclosporine-induced proliferation of cutaneous squamous cell carcinoma

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Abstract

Organ transplant recipients (OTRs) on cyclosporine A (CSA) are prone to catastrophic cutaneous squamous cell carcinoma (SCC). Allograft-sparing, cancer-targeting systemic treatments are unavailable. We have shown increased risk for catastrophic SCC in OTRs via CSA-mediated induction of IL-22. Herein, we found that CSA drives SCC proliferation and tumor growth through IL-22 and JAK/STAT pathway induction. We in turn inhibited SCC growth with an FDA-approved JAK1/2 inhibitor, ruxolitinib. In human SCC cells, the greatest proliferative response to IL-22 and CSA treatment occurred in nonmetastasizing lines. IL-22 treatment upregulated JAK1 and STAT1/3 in A431 SCC cells. JAK/STAT pathway genes were highly expressed in tumors from a cohort of CSA-exposed OTRs and in SCC with high risk for metastasis. Compared with immunocompetent SCC, genes associated with innate immunity, response to DNA damage, and p53 regulation were differentially expressed in SCC from OTRs. In nude mice engrafted with human A431 cells, IL-22 and CSA treatment increased tumor growth and upregulated IL-22 receptor, JAK1, and STAT1/3 expression. Ruxolitinib treatment significantly reduced tumor volume and reversed the accelerated tumor growth. CSA and IL-22 exacerbate aggressive behavior in SCC. Targeting the IL-22 axis via selective JAK/STAT inhibition may reduce the progression of aggressive SCC in OTRs, without compromising immunosuppression.

Authors

Melody Abikhair Burgo, Nazanin Roudiani, Jie Chen, Alexis L. Santana, Nicole Doudican, Charlotte Proby, Diane Felsen, John A. Carucci

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Figure 5

Cyclosporine A–exposed organ transplant recipients show increased STAT1, IFN, RAS oncogene, and AP-1 transcription factor subunit expression and TGF-β dysregulation, with loss of multiple tumor-suppressor genes.

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Cyclosporine A–exposed organ transplant recipients show increased STAT1,...
(A) Heatmap of genes relevant to DNA damage, nucleotide excision repair (NER), and IFN pathways based on NanoString data, demonstrating high expression of HRAS, KRAS, JUN, and FOS oncogenes in organ transplant recipients and downregulation of NER and TGF-β–related gene expression. (B) Venn diagram representation of microarray expression data for differentially expressed genes in squamous cell carcinoma (SCC, n = 8) and transplant-associated SCC (TSCC, n = 5) versus normal tissue (N, n = 10) and in TSCC versus SCC. (C) STAT1 microarray expression reveals significant upregulation in TSCC compared with both immunocompetent SCC and normal tissue (mean with SD). *P < 0.05, **P < 0.01, ****P < 0.0001, determined by 1-way ANOVA with Dunnett’s multiple comparisons test.

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