Viral mimicry evasion: a new role for oncogenic KRAS mutations

“Viral mimicry” refers to the induction of an innate immune response and interferon signaling by endogenous stimuli such as double‐stranded RNA (dsRNA). This response has been shown to have strong cancer therapeutic potential, including by enhancing the effectiveness of immune checkpoint inhibition...

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Main Authors: Raymond Chen, Aobo He, Daniel D. De Carvalho
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Wiley 2025-02-01
Series:Molecular Oncology
Subjects:
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1002/1878-0261.13771
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author Raymond Chen
Aobo He
Daniel D. De Carvalho
author_facet Raymond Chen
Aobo He
Daniel D. De Carvalho
author_sort Raymond Chen
collection DOAJ
description “Viral mimicry” refers to the induction of an innate immune response and interferon signaling by endogenous stimuli such as double‐stranded RNA (dsRNA). This response has been shown to have strong cancer therapeutic potential, including by enhancing the effectiveness of immune checkpoint inhibition (ICI) therapies, and may represent a tumor suppression mechanism that needs to be overcome for malignant transformation to proceed. In a recent study, Zhou and colleagues identify KRAS, a frequently mutated oncogene, as a negative regulator of dsRNA and viral mimicry in an ICI‐resistant colorectal cancer model. Oncogenic KRASG12D mutations downregulate the RNA‐binding protein DDX60 by activating the AKT signaling pathway, which inhibits STAT3, a critical transcription factor regulating DDX60 and other interferon‐stimulated genes. Overexpression of DDX60, which competitively binds to dsRNA to prevent RISC‐mediated degradation, or targeting of KRASG12D elevated dsRNA levels, resulting in viral mimicry activation and potentiation of ICI treatment. These results establish KRAS as a promising target to sensitize immune “cold” tumors to ICI therapy and demonstrate the potential role of oncogenic mutations in viral mimicry evasion during tumorigenesis.
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spelling doaj-art-759bf556d3a646beb23bde09ae91e30c2025-02-04T17:30:20ZengWileyMolecular Oncology1574-78911878-02612025-02-0119227127410.1002/1878-0261.13771Viral mimicry evasion: a new role for oncogenic KRAS mutationsRaymond Chen0Aobo He1Daniel D. De Carvalho2Department of Medical Biophysics University of Toronto CanadaDepartment of Medical Biophysics University of Toronto CanadaDepartment of Medical Biophysics University of Toronto Canada“Viral mimicry” refers to the induction of an innate immune response and interferon signaling by endogenous stimuli such as double‐stranded RNA (dsRNA). This response has been shown to have strong cancer therapeutic potential, including by enhancing the effectiveness of immune checkpoint inhibition (ICI) therapies, and may represent a tumor suppression mechanism that needs to be overcome for malignant transformation to proceed. In a recent study, Zhou and colleagues identify KRAS, a frequently mutated oncogene, as a negative regulator of dsRNA and viral mimicry in an ICI‐resistant colorectal cancer model. Oncogenic KRASG12D mutations downregulate the RNA‐binding protein DDX60 by activating the AKT signaling pathway, which inhibits STAT3, a critical transcription factor regulating DDX60 and other interferon‐stimulated genes. Overexpression of DDX60, which competitively binds to dsRNA to prevent RISC‐mediated degradation, or targeting of KRASG12D elevated dsRNA levels, resulting in viral mimicry activation and potentiation of ICI treatment. These results establish KRAS as a promising target to sensitize immune “cold” tumors to ICI therapy and demonstrate the potential role of oncogenic mutations in viral mimicry evasion during tumorigenesis.https://doi.org/10.1002/1878-0261.13771colorectal cancerDDX60dsRNAimmune checkpoint inhibitionKRASviral mimicry
spellingShingle Raymond Chen
Aobo He
Daniel D. De Carvalho
Viral mimicry evasion: a new role for oncogenic KRAS mutations
Molecular Oncology
colorectal cancer
DDX60
dsRNA
immune checkpoint inhibition
KRAS
viral mimicry
title Viral mimicry evasion: a new role for oncogenic KRAS mutations
title_full Viral mimicry evasion: a new role for oncogenic KRAS mutations
title_fullStr Viral mimicry evasion: a new role for oncogenic KRAS mutations
title_full_unstemmed Viral mimicry evasion: a new role for oncogenic KRAS mutations
title_short Viral mimicry evasion: a new role for oncogenic KRAS mutations
title_sort viral mimicry evasion a new role for oncogenic kras mutations
topic colorectal cancer
DDX60
dsRNA
immune checkpoint inhibition
KRAS
viral mimicry
url https://doi.org/10.1002/1878-0261.13771
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AT aobohe viralmimicryevasionanewroleforoncogenickrasmutations
AT danielddecarvalho viralmimicryevasionanewroleforoncogenickrasmutations