| Literature DB >> 33627378 |
Wan Du1,2, Fang Hua1,2, Xiong Li1,2, Jian Zhang1,2, Shasha Li1,2, Weichao Wang1,2, Jiajia Zhou1,2, Weimin Wang1,2, Peng Liao1,2, Yijian Yan1,2, Gaopeng Li1,2, Shuang Wei1,2, Sara Grove1,2, Linda Vatan1,2, Witold Zgodziński3, Marek Majewski3, Grzegorz Wallner3, Haoyan Chen4, Ilona Kryczek1,2, Jing-Yuan Fang3, Weiping Zou5,2,6,7,8,9.
Abstract
Mutations in IFN and MHC signaling genes endow immunotherapy resistance. Patients with colorectal cancer infrequently exhibit IFN and MHC signaling gene mutations and are generally resistant to immunotherapy. In exploring the integrity of IFN and MHC signaling in colorectal cancer, we found that optineurin was a shared node between the two pathways and predicted colorectal cancer patient outcome. Loss of optineurin occurs in early-stage human colorectal cancer. Immunologically, optineurin deficiency was shown to attenuate IFNGR1 and MHC-I expression, impair T-cell immunity, and diminish immunotherapy efficacy in murine cancer models and patients with cancer. Mechanistically, we observed that IFNGR1 was S-palmitoylated on Cys122, and AP3D1 bound with and sorted palmitoylated IFNGR1 to lysosome for degradation. Unexpectedly, optineurin interacted with AP3D1 to prevent palmitoylated IFNGR1 lysosomal sorting and degradation, thereby maintaining IFNγ and MHC-I signaling integrity. Furthermore, pharmacologically targeting IFNGR1 palmitoylation stabilized IFNGR1, augmented tumor immunity, and sensitized checkpoint therapy. Thus, loss of optineurin drives immune evasion and intrinsic immunotherapy resistance in colorectal cancer. SIGNIFICANCE: Loss of optineurin impairs the integrity of both IFNγ and MHC-I signaling pathways via palmitoylation-dependent IFNGR1 lysosomal sorting and degradation, thereby driving immune evasion and intrinsic immunotherapy resistance in colorectal cancer. Our work suggests that pharmacologically targeting IFNGR1 palmitoylation can stabilize IFNGR1, enhance T-cell immunity, and sensitize checkpoint therapy in colorectal cancer.See related commentary by Salvagno and Cubillos-Ruiz, p. 1623.This article is highlighted in the In This Issue feature, p. 1601. ©2021 American Association for Cancer Research.Entities:
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Year: 2021 PMID: 33627378 PMCID: PMC8292167 DOI: 10.1158/2159-8290.CD-20-1571
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Cancer Discov ISSN: 2159-8274 Impact factor: 39.397