scholarly journals Nintedanib enhances the efficacy of PD-L1 blockade by upregulating MHC-I and PD-L1 expression in tumor cells

Theranostics ◽  
2022 ◽  
Vol 12 (2) ◽  
pp. 747-766
Author(s):  
Jingyao Tu ◽  
Haoran Xu ◽  
Li Ma ◽  
Chunya Li ◽  
Wan Qin ◽  
...  
Keyword(s):  
2017 ◽  
Vol 7 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Stefanie Aust ◽  
Sophie Felix ◽  
Katharina Auer ◽  
Anna Bachmayr-Heyda ◽  
Lukas Kenner ◽  
...  

Cancers ◽  
2020 ◽  
Vol 12 (6) ◽  
pp. 1563
Author(s):  
María Pulido ◽  
Virginia Chamorro ◽  
Irene Romero ◽  
Ignacio Algarra ◽  
Alba S-Montalvo ◽  
...  

The capacity of cytotoxic-T lymphocytes to recognize and destroy tumor cells depends on the surface expression by tumor cells of MHC class I molecules loaded with tumor antigen peptides. Loss of MHC-I expression is the most frequent mechanism by which tumor cells evade the immune response. The restoration of MHC-I expression in cancer cells is crucial to enhance their immune destruction, especially in response to cancer immunotherapy. Using mouse models, we recovered MHC-I expression in the MHC-I negative tumor cell lines and analyzed their oncological and immunological profile. Fhit gene transfection induces the restoration of MHC-I expression in highly oncogenic MHC-I-negative murine tumor cell lines and genes of the IFN-γ transduction signal pathway are involved. Fhit-transfected tumor cells proved highly immunogenic, being rejected by a T lymphocyte-mediated immune response. Strikingly, this immune rejection was more frequent in females than in males. The immune response generated protected hosts against the tumor growth of non-transfected cells and against other tumor cells in our murine tumor model. Finally, we also observed a direct correlation between FHIT expression and HLA-I surface expression in human breast tumors. Recovery of Fhit expression on MHC class I negative tumor cells may be a useful immunotherapeutic strategy and may even act as an individualized immunotherapeutic vaccine.


2020 ◽  
Vol 22 (Supplement_3) ◽  
pp. iii363-iii364
Author(s):  
Viktoria Marquardt ◽  
Johanna Theruvath ◽  
David Pauck ◽  
Daniel Picard ◽  
Guido Reifenberger ◽  
...  

Abstract Medulloblastoma is the most common malignant brain tumor in childhood and comprises four distinct molecular subgroups with further layers of intertumoral heterogeneity. Amplification of the oncogene MYC drives tumorigenesis and constitutes a hallmark feature underlying Group 3 biology. Employing our in-house drug screening pipeline, we evaluated a library of epigenetic inhibitors (n=78) in various brain tumor cell lines followed by a secondary HDACi library (n=20) screen, we identified the clinically established, class I selective HDACi CI-994 as the compound with the most preferential antitumoral effect in MYC-driven medulloblastoma. We confirmed that the inhibitor response was in part MYC-dependent as our lentiviral-based MYC-overexpression model showed higher sensitivity towards CI-994 treatment as compared to the isogenic control with low endogenous MYC expression. CI-994 showed significant antitumoral effects at the primary site and at the metastatic compartment in two orthotopic mouse models of MYC-driven medulloblastoma. RNA sequencing profiling of tumor cells treated with CI-994 at IC50 revealed an up-regulation of multiple innate inflammatory pathways like NFκB, TLR4, Interferon-gamma, and TGFbeta. Flow cytometry analysis revealed an increased surface expression of MHC-I. We combined CI-994 with an anti-body against the innate checkpoint CD47 which acts as a “don’t eat me” signal previously shown by us to have significant anti-tumor activity against MYC-driven MB. Combining CI-994 with anti-CD47 shows a significant increase in macrophage-mediated phagocytosis of tumor cells and a significant increase in the survival of tumor-bearing mice.


2020 ◽  
Vol 8 (Suppl 3) ◽  
pp. A777-A777
Author(s):  
Evisa Gjini ◽  
Jimena Trillo-Tinoco ◽  
Andrew Browne ◽  
Ryan Powles ◽  
Tai Wang ◽  
...  

BackgroundProstate cancer (PCa) is primarily driven by androgen receptor (AR) signaling and has a highly immunosuppressive microenvironment. Although genomic and histopathological differences between low- and high-grade primary PCa (lgPCa and hgPCa) have been reported, an integrative assessment of multiple molecular features in the context of disease grade and metastatic outcome is lacking. We propose that a subset of hgPCa patients who relapse under SOC may benefit from adjuvant immune-checkpoint blockade (ICB) added to SOC to overcome immune suppression.MethodsWe analyzed treatment naive prostatectomy tissue from a cohort of 124 primary PCa patients (n= 58, Gleason score ≤6; n= 66, Gleason score ≥ 8). We performed RNAseq expression profiling, whole-exome sequencing (WES) and immunohistochemistry. We employed digital spatial analysis in tumor vs. stromal regions to characterize differences in CD8+ T-cell topology between lgPCa and hgPCaResults1.Comparisons in lg vs. hgPCA: Digital spatial analysis assessing the proximity of CD8+ T-cells to tumor cells revealed a T-cell exclusion phenotype that is more prominent in hgPCa, whereas evaluation of overall CD8+ T-cell density in tumor and stromal regions did not differentiate disease grades. HgPCa had a higher frequency of at least one functional mutation in either TP53, RHPN2, or KMT2D genes compared to lgPCa. Assessment of MHC-I deficiency by IHC and mRNA revealed that hgPCa has significantly lower MHC-I protein expression compared to lgPCa. Interestingly, MHC-I loss in hgPCa associated with a T-cell exclusion phenotype. Moreover, RNAseq gene expression signatures revealed higher expression of tumor-associated macrophage (TAMs), T-regs, Cancer-Associated Fibroblasts (CAFs), DNA damage repair (DDR) genes and lower Interferon-γ (IFN- γ) expression in hgPCa compared to lgPCa. Overall, hgPCa is characterized by a combined phenotype of ‘MHCIloss/IFN- γ low/CAFhigh/TAMhigh/T-reghigh/DDRhigh’. 2.Comparisons within hgPCA that develop metastasis: Unsupervised analysis of molecular features in hgPCa patients that developed metastases identified a subset of patients that exhibit a less immunosuppressive phenotype with lower tumor AR expression, retained tumor MHC-I expression, moderate CD8+ T-cell infiltration and a high IFN-γ RNA signature (figure 1), suggesting potential benefit from ICB therapyAbstract 733 Figure 1Unsupervised analysis of primary hgPCa that develop metastasis. Features used for unsupervised classification into Cluster 1 and Cluster 2 are: IHC CD8+ cell proximity to tumor cells (IHC_Infiltrated/Desert/Excluded), CD8+ overall cell density in tumor area, MHCI IHC H-score in tumor (% of tumor cells that are positive X stain intensity), RNAseq signatures for AR pathway in tumor, T-cell exhaustion, Interferon-y, Macrophage M1, Neuroendocrine phenotypes and DNA repair pathway. Patient cohort annotated for at least one mutations in driver genes (TP53, RHPN2, KMT2D), percent tumor expression of MHCI IHC (>25% high, <25% low), CD8 infiltration type in relation to tumor and cancer subtypes as defined by Mortensen mRNA profiling (Mortensen at al, Science Reports 2015).ConclusionsOur analysis suggests that hgPCa is characterized by low antigenicity as assessed by loss of MHC-I protein expression and an immunosuppressive microenvironment rich in CAFs, macrophages, T-regs and T-cell exclusion phenotypes. Unlike lgPCa, hgPCA can have a poor prognosis (within 5 years relapse). However, a subset of hgPCa patients that metastasized while on SOC exhibited a biomarker profile that might benefit from combination of SOC with ICBEthics ApprovalThis study was approved by BMS Cambridge Massachusetts Institutional Biosafety Committee, approval number CAM_2020_12050_6Consent‘Written informed consent was obtained from the patient for publication of this abstract and any accompanying images. A copy of the written consent is available for review by the Editor of this journal.’


2019 ◽  
Vol 9 ◽  
Author(s):  
Chrissie E. B. Ong ◽  
Alan Bruce Lyons ◽  
Gregory M. Woods ◽  
Andrew S. Flies
Keyword(s):  
Mhc I ◽  

2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
Marta Requesens ◽  
Mark Bunting ◽  
Maulik Vyas ◽  
Shawn Demehri
Keyword(s):  
Nk Cells ◽  

2020 ◽  
Vol 21 (5) ◽  
pp. 1806
Author(s):  
Julie Vackova ◽  
Adrianna Piatakova ◽  
Ingrid Polakova ◽  
Michal Smahel

Programmed cell death protein 1 (PD-1)/PD-1 ligand 1 (PD-L1) blockade is a promising therapy for various cancer types, but most patients are still resistant. Therefore, a larger number of predictive biomarkers is necessary. In this study, we assessed whether a loss-of-function mutation of the interferon (IFN)-γ receptor 1 (IFNGR1) in tumor cells can interfere with anti-PD-L1 therapy. For this purpose, we used the mouse oncogenic TC-1 cell line expressing PD-L1 and major histocompatibility complex class I (MHC-I) molecules and its TC-1/A9 clone with reversibly downregulated PD-L1 and MHC-I expression. Using the CRISPR/Cas9 system, we generated cells with deactivated IFNGR1 (TC-1/dIfngr1 and TC-1/A9/dIfngr1). In tumors, IFNGR1 deactivation did not lead to PD-L1 or MHC-I reduction on tumor cells. From potential inducers, mainly IFN-α and IFN-β enhanced PD-L1 and MHC-I expression on TC-1/dIfngr1 and TC-1/A9/dIfngr1 cells in vitro. Neutralization of the IFN-α/IFN-β receptor confirmed the effect of these cytokines in vivo. Combined immunotherapy with PD-L1 blockade and DNA vaccination showed that IFNGR1 deactivation did not reduce tumor sensitivity to anti-PD-L1. Thus, the impairment of IFN-γ signaling may not be sufficient for PD-L1 and MHC-I reduction on tumor cells and resistance to PD-L1 blockade, and thus should not be used as a single predictive marker for anti-PD-1/PD-L1 cancer therapy.


Author(s):  
C. N. Sun ◽  
C. Araoz ◽  
H. J. White

The ultrastructure of a cerebral primitive neuroectodermal tumor has been reported previously. In the present case, we will present some unusual previously unreported membranous structures and alterations in the cytoplasm and nucleus of the tumor cells.Specimens were cut into small pieces about 1 mm3 and immediately fixed in 4% glutaraldehyde in phosphate buffer for two hours, then post-fixed in 1% buffered osmium tetroxide for one hour. After dehydration, tissues were embedded in Epon 812. Thin sections were stained with uranyl acetate and lead citrate.In the cytoplasm of the tumor cells, we found paired cisternae (Fig. 1) and annulate lamellae (Fig. 2) noting that the annulate lamellae were sometimes associated with the outer nuclear envelope (Fig. 3). These membranous structures have been reported in other tumor cells. In our case, mitochondrial to nuclear envelope fusions were often noted (Fig. 4). Although this phenomenon was reported in an oncocytoma, their frequency in the present study is quite striking.


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