IL1β/IL1R1/IRAK4 Drives Inflammatory Ovarian Cancer Seeding at the inflamed sites and Is Reversed by an IRAK4 inhibitor UR241-2

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Abstract

Inflammation-driven tumor implantation, such as port-site metastasis (PSM) following laparoscopic gynecologic surgery and peritoneal seeding during post-surgical recurrence, represents an aggressive clinical problem that remains poorly understood and lacks targeted therapies. To address this, we developed a non-surgical Mesothelium-Inflammation/Injury-Metastasis (MIM) model and investigated the role of the IL-1β/IL1R1/MYD88/IRAK1/4 axis and NLRP3 in epithelial ovarian cancer (EOC) seeding at inflamed or injured sites. This model created by a needle injury recapitulates inflammation-driven peritoneal seeding and mimics PSM and inflammation associated dissemination in peritoneum during recurrence. Seeding was dependent on Il1r1 but not Nlrp3, despite its role in regulating IL-1β production, as Il1ra⁻/⁻ and Nlrp3⁻/⁻ mice phenocopied wild-type C57BL/6 mice. Given the limited antitumor efficacy of IL-1β–targeting agents such as Anakinra and Canakinumab, we focused on IRAK4 as a therapeutic target. IRAK4 knockdown significantly prolonged survival, reduced tumor cell adhesion, downregulated E-cadherin and Wnt4, and induced S-phase/mitotic arrest. This led to the development of UR241-2, a small-molecule IRAK4 inhibitor, which was validated through molecular simulations, hotspot analysis, nanoBRET, global kinome profiling, and NF-κβ reporter assays. UR241-2 inhibited NF-κβ nuclear translocation and blocked IL-1β–induced IRAK4 phosphorylation. UR241-2 exhibited favorable drug-like properties, including absence of CYP or hERG inhibition, and acceptable CaCo-2 permeability, plasma protein binding, microsomal stability, and pharmacokinetics. In vivo, UR241-2 reduced SKOV3 xenograft growth, suppressed mesothelial seeding, and increased MHC-II⁺ macrophages and activated neutrophils in syngeneic high-grade epithelial ovarian HGS3 tumors. RNA-seq revealed enrichment of neutrophil activation signatures and suppression of extracellular matrix (ECM) gene programs. Together, these findings establish a role for the IL-1β/IL1R1/IRAK4 axis in inflammation-driven PSM and peritoneal seeding and ECM regulation in EOC, and demonstrate that IRAK4 inhibition activates antitumor immune responses, providing a therapeutic strategy to block metastatic seeding and improve tumor control.

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