Tumor Cells Enriched for Interferon and Inflammatory Programs Pre-Exist in High Grade Serous Ovarian Cancer and are Proportionately Significantly Increased Post Chemotherapy
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Drug-tolerant, high-grade serous ovarian cancer (HGSOC) cells that persist after first-line chemotherapy and subsequently relapse often retain sensitivity to secondary treatment, suggesting a therapeutic window before stable chemoresistance emerges. We performed single-cell RNA sequencing (scRNA-seq) on seven matched pairs of tumors, collected pre- and post-chemotherapy, to define vulnerabilities in these reversibly-resistant cells. Treatment induced a marked enrichment of tumor and stromal cell populations expressing correlated interferon (IFN) and inflammatory (IFM) gene signatures, with a concurrent depletion of proliferation-related and MYC-associated states in the tumor cells. Cross-cohort single cell sequencing analysis of >130 treatment-naive tumors revealed heterogeneity in the abundance of IFN/IFM-expressing cells. Multiplex immunofluorescence imaging of IFN-stimulated gene (ISG) products confirmed the presence of spatially clustered ISG-positive tumor cells in all cases, as well as in serous tubal intraepithelial carcinomas (STIC lesions), the presumptive HGSOC precursors. ISG expression correlated strongly with ORF1P, a protein encoded by the endogenous retrotransposon LINE1. These data suggest that early oncogenic events drive LINE1 derepression and innate immune activation, establishing an IFN-rich transcriptional state that persists in tumor subpopulations and is strongly enhanced by chemotherapy.