1. Academic Validation
  2. PARP7 Suppresses Radiation-induced Necroptosis and Abscopal Immunity

PARP7 Suppresses Radiation-induced Necroptosis and Abscopal Immunity

  • Res Sq. 2025 Nov 7:rs.3.rs-7881707. doi: 10.21203/rs.3.rs-7881707/v1.
Gaorav Gupta 1 Anna Goddard 1 Sierra McDonald 1 Lynn Lerner 1 Maxwell Finkelstein 1 Qinhong Wang 1 Faeze Gharibpoor 1 Min-Guk Cho 1 Simon Ellington 1 Matthew Sutcliffe 1 Kevin Raynard Mott 2 William Green 1 Amber Gomez 1 Steven Vensko 1 J Justin Milner 3 Benjamin Vincent 4 Charles Perou 1
Affiliations

Affiliations

  • 1 University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill.
  • 2 University of North Carolina School of Medicine.
  • 3 University of North Carolina.
  • 4 UNC-Chapel Hill.
Abstract

The abscopal effect, in which local radiotherapy (RT) drives regression of distant tumors, remains unpredictable and mechanistically elusive. Using a panel of p53-null murine breast Cancer models, we identified tumor-intrinsic determinants of abscopal competence to RT and immune checkpoint inhibitors (ICI). Abscopal-competent tumors exhibited heightened type I interferon stimulated gene (ISG) expression, induction of the Necroptosis mediator ZBP1, and recruitment of antigen-presenting cells (APCs) and effector T cells in distant tumors. Transcriptomic analyses revealed PARP7 as a tumor-intrinsic suppressor of RT-induced ISGs and Necroptosis. Pharmacologic PARP7 inhibition amplified RT-driven ISGs and ZBP1-dependent Necroptosis. In vivo, PARP7 blockade combined with RT + ICI conferred abscopal competency to resistant tumors, improving distant tumor control, systemic immune activation, and survival. Notably, ZBP1 loss abrogated these effects, preventing APC recruitment and T cell priming. These findings establish PARP7 and Necroptosis as opposing regulators of abscopal responses and nominate PARP7 inhibition as a strategy to overcome RT + ICI resistance.

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