| Literature DB >> 33826903 |
Roman V Uzhachenko1, Vijaya Bharti1, Zhufeng Ouyang1, Ashlyn Blevins2, Stacey Mont2, Nabil Saleh2, Hunter A Lawrence2, Chengli Shen3, Sheau-Chiann Chen4, Gregory D Ayers4, David G DeNardo5, Carlos Arteaga6, Ann Richmond7, Anna E Vilgelm8.
Abstract
Inhibitors of cyclin-dependent kinases 4 and 6 (CDK4/6i) delay progression of metastatic breast cancer. However, complete responses are uncommon and tumors eventually relapse. Here, we show that CDK4/6i can enhance efficacy of T cell-based therapies, such as adoptive T cell transfer or T cell-activating antibodies anti-OX40/anti-4-1BB, in murine breast cancer models. This effect is driven by the induction of chemokines CCL5, CXCL9, and CXCL10 in CDK4/6i-treated tumor cells facilitating recruitment of activated CD8+ T cells, but not Tregs, into the tumor. Mechanistically, chemokine induction is associated with metabolic stress that CDK4/6i treatment induces in breast cancer cells. Despite the cell cycle arrest, CDK4/6i-treated cells retain high metabolic activity driven by deregulated PI3K/mTOR pathway. This causes cell hypertrophy and increases mitochondrial content/activity associated with oxidative stress and inflammatory stress response. Our findings uncover a link between tumor metabolic vulnerabilities and anti-tumor immunity and support further development of CDK4/6i and immunotherapy combinations.Entities:
Keywords: CCL5; CDK4/6 inhibitors; ROS; adoptive cell transfer; anti-tumor immunity; cancer metabolism; chemokines; metabolic stress; palbociclib
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Year: 2021 PMID: 33826903 PMCID: PMC8383195 DOI: 10.1016/j.celrep.2021.108944
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Cell Rep Impact factor: 9.423