Abstract

Abstract Senescent cells have a unique senescence-associated secretory profile (SASP) and understanding SASP has contributed to numerous advances in knowledge on aging and cancer biology. Quiescence, which is an important yet poorly understood mechanism for chemoresistance, is related but distinct from senescence. Quiescence shares a non-proliferative feature with senescence but is a reversible state in which quiescent cells can reenter the cell cycle. We hypothesized that, analogous to senescent cells, quiescent cells have a distinct quiescence-associated secretory profile (QuASP) and that defining the QuASP will uncover new genes and pathways associated with cancer cell viability and therapeutic resistance. Indeed, suggesting quiescent cells have a unique and biologically important secretome, we found that tumor conditioned medium (TCM) from quiescent ovarian cancer cells (qOvCa) vs. TCM from proliferating cancer cells increased chemoresistance. Similarly, TCM from quiescent cancer cells vs. TCM from proliferating cancer cells suppressed T cell proliferation and INF-gamma/Granzyme B secretion, suggesting a QuASP immunosuppressive effect. RNASeq analysis of qOvCa cells revealed the secreted factor Follistatin (FST) is upregulated in qOvCa and acted as a paracrine pattern to induce chemoresistance. Furthermore, FST was found to be upregulated in peritumoral fluid following chemotherapy and FST levels in patients with OvCa predicted poor prognosis. To identify additional QuASP factors, we used an ER-BIOID labeled system and LC-MS/MS to characterize the secreted proteins from qOvCa induced by serum starvation compared with normal cells in three OvCa cell lines (PT412, PT340, HEY1). Quiescent OvCa cells indeed have a secretome that is highly unique from proliferating cells, with 137/577 upregulated proteins (LFC>1) and 65/577 downregulated proteins (LFC←1 or no detection in quiescence). Several proteins identified as upregulated have been linked to immunosuppression and/or chemoresistance, oncogenesis and cell cycle were selected for validation and further analysis (CLU, VGF, SERPINE1). In conclusion, we find quiescent cells have a unique quiescence associated secretory profile and that the QuASP induces chemoresistance and immunosuppression. As such, this study has important implications for cancer therapy. Citation Format: Qi Jiang, Santiago Panesso-Gómez, Divya Natesan, Matthew L. MacDonald, Ronald J. Buckanovich. Characterization of quiescence-associated secretory profile (QuASP) in cancer: A novel defining feature and therapeutic target [abstract]. In: Proceedings of the American Association for Cancer Research Annual Meeting 2024; Part 1 (Regular Abstracts); 2024 Apr 5-10; San Diego, CA. Philadelphia (PA): AACR; Cancer Res 2024;84(6_Suppl):Abstract nr 2782.

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