| Literature DB >> 30911134 |
Laura Zito1, Valentina Gambacorta1,2, Michela Riba3, Cristina Toffalori1, Giacomo Oliveira1,4,5, Gabriele Bucci1,3, Matteo Barcella6, Orietta Spinelli7, Raffaella Greco8, Lara Crucitti8,9, Nicoletta Cieri4,8,9, Maddalena Noviello4, Francesco Manfredi4, Elisa Montaldo10, Renato Ostuni10, Matteo M Naldini11, Bernhard Gentner8,11, Miguel Waterhouse12, Robert Zeiser12, Jurgen Finke12, Maher Hanoun13, Dietrich W Beelen13, Ivana Gojo14, Leo Luznik14, Masahiro Onozawa15, Takanori Teshima15, Raynier Devillier16, Didier Blaise16, Constantijn J M Halkes17, Marieke Griffioen17, Matteo G Carrabba8, Massimo Bernardi8, Jacopo Peccatori8, Cristina Barlassina6, Elia Stupka3,5, Dejan Lazarevic3, Giovanni Tonon3, Alessandro Rambaldi7,18, Davide Cittaro3, Chiara Bonini4,19, Katharina Fleischhauer1,20, Fabio Ciceri8,19, Luca Vago21,22.
Abstract
Transplantation of hematopoietic cells from a healthy individual (allogeneic hematopoietic cell transplantation (allo-HCT)) demonstrates that adoptive immunotherapy can cure blood cancers: still, post-transplantation relapses remain frequent. To explain their drivers, we analyzed the genomic and gene expression profiles of acute myeloid leukemia (AML) blasts purified from patients at serial time-points during their disease history. We identified a transcriptional signature specific for post-transplantation relapses and highly enriched in immune-related processes, including T cell costimulation and antigen presentation. In two independent patient cohorts we confirmed the deregulation of multiple costimulatory ligands on AML blasts at post-transplantation relapse (PD-L1, B7-H3, CD80, PVRL2), mirrored by concomitant changes in circulating donor T cells. Likewise, we documented the frequent loss of surface expression of HLA-DR, -DQ and -DP on leukemia cells, due to downregulation of the HLA class II regulator CIITA. We show that loss of HLA class II expression and upregulation of inhibitory checkpoint molecules represent alternative modalities to abolish AML recognition from donor-derived T cells, and can be counteracted by interferon-γ or checkpoint blockade, respectively. Our results demonstrate that the deregulation of pathways involved in T cell-mediated allorecognition is a distinctive feature and driver of AML relapses after allo-HCT, which can be rapidly translated into personalized therapies.Entities:
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Year: 2019 PMID: 30911134 DOI: 10.1038/s41591-019-0400-z
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Nat Med ISSN: 1078-8956 Impact factor: 53.440