| Literature DB >> 28680756 |
Julian P Layer1, Marie T Kronmüller2, Thomas Quast2, Debby van den Boorn-Konijnenberg1, Maike Effern1,3, Daniel Hinze1, Kristina Althoff4, Alexander Schramm4,5, Frank Westermann6, Martin Peifer7,8, Gunther Hartmann9, Thomas Tüting10,11, Waldemar Kolanus2, Matthias Fischer8,12,13, Johannes Schulte14, Michael Hölzel1.
Abstract
Immune checkpoint inhibitors have significantly improved the treatment of several cancers. T-cell infiltration and the number of neoantigens caused by tumor-specific mutations are correlated to favorable responses in cancers with a high mutation load. Accordingly, checkpoint immunotherapy is thought to be less effective in tumors with low mutation frequencies such as neuroblastoma, a neuroendocrine tumor of early childhood with poor outcome of the high-risk disease group. However, spontaneous regressions and paraneoplastic syndromes seen in neuroblastoma patients suggest substantial immunogenicity. Using an integrative transcriptomic approach, we investigated the molecular characteristics of T-cell infiltration in primary neuroblastomas as an indicator of pre-existing immune responses and potential responsiveness to checkpoint inhibition. Here, we report that a T-cell-poor microenvironment in primary metastatic neuroblastomas is associated with genomic amplification of the MYCN (N-Myc) proto-oncogene. These tumors exhibited lower interferon pathway activity and chemokine expression in line with reduced immune cell infiltration. Importantly, we identified a global role for N-Myc in the suppression of interferon and pro-inflammatory pathways in human and murine neuroblastoma cell lines. N-Myc depletion potently enhanced targeted interferon pathway activation by a small molecule agonist of the cGAS-STING innate immune pathway. This promoted chemokine expression including Cxcl10 and T-cell recruitment in microfluidics migration assays. Hence, our data suggest N-Myc inhibition plus targeted IFN activation as adjuvant strategy to enforce cytotoxic T-cell recruitment in MYCN-amplified neuroblastomas.Entities:
Keywords: Chemokine; Cxcl10; N-Myc; STING; immunotherapy; infiltration; interferoninfiltration; neuroblastoma
Year: 2017 PMID: 28680756 PMCID: PMC5486176 DOI: 10.1080/2162402X.2017.1320626
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Oncoimmunology ISSN: 2162-4011 Impact factor: 8.110