Data from Enhanced Acid Sphingomyelinase Activity Drives Immune Evasion and Tumor Growth in Non–Small Cell Lung Carcinoma
The lipid hydrolase enzyme acid sphingomyelinase (ASM) is required for the conversion of the lipid cell membrane component sphingomyelin into ceramide. In cancer cells, ASM-mediated ceramide production is important for apoptosis, cell proliferation, and immune modulation, highlighting ASM as a potential multimodal therapeutic target. In this study, we demonstrate elevated ASM activity in the lung tumor environment and blood serum of patients with non–small cell lung cancer (NSCLC). RNAi-mediated attenuation of SMPD1 in human NSCLC cells rendered them resistant to serum starvation–induced apoptosis. In a murine model of lung adenocarcinoma, ASM deficiency reduced tumor development in a manner associated with significant enhancement of Th1-mediated and cytotoxic T-cell–mediated antitumor immunity. Our findings indicate that targeting ASM in NSCLC can act by tumor cell–intrinsic and –extrinsic mechanisms to suppress tumor cell growth, most notably by enabling an effective antitumor immune response by the host. Cancer Res; 77(21); 5963–76. ©2017 AACR.
CITE THIS COLLECTION
FUNDING
IZKF
SHARE
Usage metrics
Read the peer-reviewed publication

AUTHORS (16)
- KKKaterina KachlerMBMaximilian BailerLHLisanne HeimFSFabian SchumacherMRMartin ReichelCHCorinna D. HolzingerSTSonja TrumpSMSusanne MittlerJMJuliana MontiDTDenis I. TrufaRRRalf J. RiekerAHArndt HartmannHSHoria SirbuBKBurkhard KleuserJKJohannes KornhuberSFSusetta Finotto