| Literature DB >> 34358448 |
William A Freed-Pastor1, Laurens J Lambert2, Zackery A Ely2, Nimisha B Pattada3, Arjun Bhutkar3, George Eng4, Kim L Mercer3, Ana P Garcia3, Lin Lin3, William M Rideout3, William L Hwang5, Jason M Schenkel6, Alex M Jaeger3, Roderick T Bronson3, Peter M K Westcott3, Tyler D Hether7, Prajan Divakar7, Jason W Reeves7, Vikram Deshpande8, Toni Delorey9, Devan Phillips9, Omer H Yilmaz10, Aviv Regev11, Tyler Jacks12.
Abstract
The CD155/TIGIT axis can be co-opted during immune evasion in chronic viral infections and cancer. Pancreatic adenocarcinoma (PDAC) is a highly lethal malignancy, and immune-based strategies to combat this disease have been largely unsuccessful to date. We corroborate prior reports that a substantial portion of PDAC harbors predicted high-affinity MHC class I-restricted neoepitopes and extend these findings to advanced/metastatic disease. Using multiple preclinical models of neoantigen-expressing PDAC, we demonstrate that intratumoral neoantigen-specific CD8+ T cells adopt multiple states of dysfunction, resembling those in tumor-infiltrating lymphocytes of PDAC patients. Mechanistically, genetic and/or pharmacologic modulation of the CD155/TIGIT axis was sufficient to promote immune evasion in autochthonous neoantigen-expressing PDAC. Finally, we demonstrate that the CD155/TIGIT axis is critical in maintaining immune evasion in PDAC and uncover a combination immunotherapy (TIGIT/PD-1 co-blockade plus CD40 agonism) that elicits profound anti-tumor responses in preclinical models, now poised for clinical evaluation.Entities:
Keywords: CD155; TIGIT; immune evasion; immunotherapy; pancreatic cancer
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Year: 2021 PMID: 34358448 PMCID: PMC8511341 DOI: 10.1016/j.ccell.2021.07.007
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Cancer Cell ISSN: 1535-6108 Impact factor: 38.585