| Literature DB >> 33042135 |
Cavan P Bailey1,2,3, Mary Figueroa1,2,3, Achintyan Gangadharan1, Dean A Lee4, Joya Chandra1,2,3.
Abstract
Cell therapies such as chimeric-antigen receptor (CAR) T-cells and NK cells are cutting-edge methods for treating cancer and other diseases. There is high interest in optimizing drug treatment regimens to best work together with emerging cell therapies, such as targeting epigenetic enzymes to stimulate recognition of tumor cells by immune cells. Herein, we uncover new mechanisms of the histone demethylase LSD1, and various inhibitors targeting unique domains of LSD1, in the function of NK cells grown for cell therapy. Catalytic inhibitors (tranylcypromine and the structural derivatives GSK LSD1 and RN-1) can irreversibly block the demethylase activity of LSD1, while scaffolding inhibitors (SP-2509 and clinical successor SP-2577, also known as seclidemstat) disrupt epigenetic complexes that include LSD1. Relevant combinations of LSD1 inhibitors with cell therapy infusions and immune checkpoint blockade have shown efficacy in pre-clinical solid tumor models, reinforcing a need to understand how these drugs would impact T- and NK cells. We find that scaffolding LSD1 inhibitors potently reduce oxidative phosphorylation and glycolysis of NK cells, and higher doses induce mitochondrial reactive oxygen species and depletion of the antioxidant glutathione. These effects are unique to scaffolding inhibitors compared to catalytic, to NK cells compared to T-cells, and importantly, can fully ablate the lytic capacity of NK cells. Supplementation with biologically achievable levels of glutathione rescues NK cell cytolytic function but not NK cell metabolism. Our results suggest glutathione supplementation may reverse NK cell activity suppression in patients treated with seclidemstat.Entities:
Keywords: LSD1; NK cell; antioxidant; glutathione; metabolism
Mesh:
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Year: 2020 PMID: 33042135 PMCID: PMC7527493 DOI: 10.3389/fimmu.2020.02196
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Immunol ISSN: 1664-3224 Impact factor: 7.561
Figure 1Scaffolding LSD1 inhibitors reduce viability and suppress metabolism in NK cells. (A) LSD1 inhibitors used and their respective properties. (B) Viability of NK cells after 48 h treatment of LSD1 inhibitors (TCP: 1 mM, GSK LSD1: 100 μM, RN-1: 25 μM, SP-2509: 5 μM, SP-2577: 5 μM) using amine-reactive viability dye analyzed via flow cytometry. (C) Viability of T-cells using the same method. (D) Viability of NK and T-cells under SP-2509 and SP-2577 treatment. *q < 0.01 comparing NK to T-cells via unpaired t-test. (E) Dose response of SP-2509 and SP-2577 in NK cells at indicated time points using amine-reactive viability dye. (F) Basal and maximal OXPHOS of NK cells after 48 h treatment with indicated LSD1 inhibitors measured using XF Mito Stress Test on a Seahorse XFe96 analyzer. (G) Basal and maximal OXPHOS of T-cells using the same method. *q < 0.01. All conditions are compared to DMSO control via t-test with FDR correction. At least three independent experiments are displayed (±SEM), sourced from two unique NK cell donors and 1 T-cell donor.
Figure 2NK cells produce uncontrolled mitochondrial superoxide when treated with scaffolding LSD1 inhibitors. (A) NK cells treated for 48 h with indicated LSD1 inhibitors were stained with MitoTracker Deep Red and MitoSOX Red combined with viability dye. Median fluorescent intensity (MFI) of APC channel (MitoTracker) and PE channel (MitoSOX) are plotted from live cells only. (B) T-cell MitoTracker and MitoSOX data using the same method. (C) NK and T-cell MitoSOX MFI divided by MitoTracker MFI indicates mitochondrial superoxide relative to healthy mitochondria number. (D) Basal glycolysis of NK and T-cells treated for 48 h with LSD1 inhibitors measured using XF Mito Stress Test. (E) OCR dose response of SP-2509 and SP-2577 in NK cells treated for 48 h and measured using XF Mito Stress Test. (F) Basal glycolysis dose response of SP-2509 and SP-2577 in NK cells treated for 48 h and measured using XF Mito Stress Test. *q < 0.01. All conditions are compared to DMSO control via t-test with FDR correction. Marked Seahorse data points indicate all treatment conditions are significant vs. DMSO control. At least three independent experiments are displayed (± SEM), sourced from 2 unique NK cell donors and 1 T-cell donor.
Figure 3Scaffolding LSD1 inhibitor-induced oxidative stress in NK cells is dose dependent and can be rescued with glutathione supplementation, but metabolism defects cannot. (A) MitoSOX dose response of SP-2509 and SP-2577 in live NK cells at indicated time points and rescued using 2.5 mM glutathione ethyl ester (GSHee). (B) Glutathione dose response of SP-2509 and SP-2577 in live NK cells measured using mBCL and rescued using 2.5 mM GSHee. (C) MitoTracker dose response of SP-2509 and SP-2577 in live NK cells and attempted rescued using 2.5 mM GSHee. (D) OXPHOS of NK cells treated with scaffolding LSD1 inhibitors for 48 h and attempted rescue with cell-wide antioxidants (GSHee and Trolox) and mitochondrial-targeted antioxidants [mitoquinol (MQ) and SKQ1] measured using XF Mito Stress Test. (E) Basal glycolysis of NK cells treated with scaffolding LSD1 inhibitors for 48 h using the same method and measured using XF Mito Stress test. *q < 0.01. All conditions are compared to DMSO control via t-test with FDR correction. Marked Seahorse data points indicate all treatment conditions are significant vs. DMSO control. At least three independent experiments are displayed (± SEM), sourced from two unique NK cell donors.
Figure 4NK cell ligand expression and cytotoxicity are impaired by scaffolding LSD1 inhibitors, but viability and cytotoxicity can be rescued with glutathione supplementation. (A) NK cells treated for 48 h with indicated LSD1 inhibitors display reduced activating ligand expression. (B) Viability dose response of SP-2509 and SP-2577 in NK cells treated with and without 2.5 mM GSHee supplementation. (C) Flow cytometry plots of NK cells treated with SP-2509 at indicated doses for 48 h, with and without 2.5 mM GSHee supplementation. (D) Quantification of flow cytometry gates from panel C across three unique NK donors. (E) NK cell cytotoxicity against K562 target cells is reduced by 48 h pre-treatment with indicated LSD1 inhibitors. (F) NK cell cytotoxicity against MOLM13 target cells after 48 h pre-treatment with SP-2509. (G) NK cell cytotoxicity against K562 target cells after 48 h pre-treatment with SP-2509, with and without 2.5 mM GSHee supplementation. (H) Working model of scaffolding LSD1 inhibitor effects on NK cell metabolism, redox state, and function. *q < 0.01. All conditions are compared to DMSO control via t-test with FDR correction. At least three independent experiments are displayed (± SEM), sourced from three unique NK cell donors.