| Literature DB >> 34830196 |
Andrea Palicelli1, Stefania Croci2, Alessandra Bisagni1, Eleonora Zanetti1, Dario De Biase3, Beatrice Melli4,5, Francesca Sanguedolce6, Moira Ragazzi1, Magda Zanelli1, Alcides Chaux7, Sofia Cañete-Portillo8, Maria Paola Bonasoni1, Alessandra Soriano9,10, Stefano Ascani11,12, Maurizio Zizzo13, Carolina Castro Ruiz5,13, Antonio De Leo14, Guido Giordano15, Matteo Landriscina15, Giuseppe Carrieri16, Luigi Cormio16, Daniel M Berney17, Jatin Gandhi18, Davide Nicoli19, Enrico Farnetti19, Giacomo Santandrea1,5, Martina Bonacini2.
Abstract
Epigenetic alterations (including DNA methylation or miRNAs) influence oncogene/oncosuppressor gene expression without changing the DNA sequence. Prostate cancer (PC) displays a complex genetic and epigenetic regulation of cell-growth pathways and tumor progression. We performed a systematic literature review (following PRISMA guidelines) focused on the epigenetic regulation of PD-L1 expression in PC. In PC cell lines, CpG island methylation of the CD274 promoter negatively regulated PD-L1 expression. Histone modifiers also influence the PD-L1 transcription rate: the deletion or silencing of the histone modifiers MLL3/MML1 can positively regulate PD-L1 expression. Epigenetic drugs (EDs) may be promising in reprogramming tumor cells, reversing epigenetic modifications, and cancer immune evasion. EDs promoting a chromatin-inactive transcriptional state (such as bromodomain or p300/CBP inhibitors) downregulated PD-L1, while EDs favoring a chromatin-active state (i.e., histone deacetylase inhibitors) increased PD-L1 expression. miRNAs can regulate PD-L1 at a post-transcriptional level. miR-195/miR-16 were negatively associated with PD-L1 expression and positively correlated to longer biochemical recurrence-free survival; they also enhanced the radiotherapy efficacy in PC cell lines. miR-197 and miR-200a-c positively correlated to PD-L1 mRNA levels and inversely correlated to the methylation of PD-L1 promoter in a large series. miR-570, miR-34a and miR-513 may also be involved in epigenetic regulation.Entities:
Keywords: DNA methylation; PD-L1; cancer; checkpoint inhibitors; epigenetic; immunotherapy; miRNA; prostate
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2021 PMID: 34830196 PMCID: PMC8619683 DOI: 10.3390/ijms222212314
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Mol Sci ISSN: 1422-0067 Impact factor: 5.923
Figure 1Review of the literature: PRISMA flow-chart.
PD-L1 epigenetic regulation in prostatic carcinoma-derived cell lines.
| Experiment Type | Cell Lines | Effects on PD-L1 Expression | Possible Mechanism of Action | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| DNMT | Dnmt1, Dnmt3 [ | Methyltransferase overexpression | DU145 | Neg | NR |
| Histone modifiers | PC3, TRAMP-C2 | Pos | NR | ||
| PC3, DU145 | Pos | NR | |||
| HDAC class I [ | HDAC class I deletion | DU145 | Neg | NR | |
| p300/CBP [ | DU145 | Pos | NR | ||
| miRNAs | miR-195, miR-16 [ | miRNA overexpression | PC3, DU145, TRAMP-C1 | Neg | NR |
| miR-15 [ | Co with TTC with miRNA mimic or inhibitor | PC3, DU145 (*) | Neg | Reduction of cell viability, migration and invasion, and increased apoptosis of tumor cells. Increased CD8+ T cell cytotoxicity when miR-15 is overexpressed. Opposite effects when miR-15 is inhibited. | |
| Long non-coding RNA | KCNQ1OT1 [ | Co with long non-coding RNA overexpressed TTC | PC3, DU145 (*) | Pos | Increased cell viability, migration, invasion and apoptosis of tumor cells, reduction of CD8+ T cell cytotoxicity. |
| mRNA translation modulators | eEF2K [ | eEF2K ablation | PC3 | Pos | eEF2K promotes the association of PD-L1 mRNAs with translationally active polyribosomes, enhancing PD-L1 expression. eEF2K-depleted cancer cells are more vulnerable to NK cells. |
(*): effects on CD8+ T-cell infiltrate were also investigated. Co: Co-culture; DNMT: DNA methyltransferase; HDAC: Histone deacetylase; Neg: Negative regulator; NR: not reported (no effect was investigated); Pos: Positive regulator; TTC: transfected tumor cells.
Experimental treatments with epigenetic drugs.
| Drug | Drug Type | Experiment Type | Cell Lines | Effects on PD-L1 | Studied Effect |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| JQ1 [ | bromodomain inhibitor | Treatment | PC3 | ↓ | ↓ Proliferation |
| JQ1 [ | bromodomain inhibitor | Treatment | PC3, DU145, Myc-Cap | ↓ | NEI |
| RVX [ | bromodomain inhibitor | Treatment | PC3 | ↓ | NEI |
| SAHA [ | HDAC class I-II inhibitor | Treatment | PC3, DU145 | ↑ | NEI |
| LBH589 [ | pan-deacetylase inhibitor | Treatment | PC3, DU145 | ↑ | NEI |
| A485 [ | p300/CBP inhibitor | Treatment | TRAMP-C2 Ras | ↓ | NEI |
| OIRC-9429 [ | WDR5 inhibitor | Treatment | PC3, DU145 | ↓ | NEI |
| EZH2 inhibitor [ | EZH2 inhibitor | Treatment | MYC-CaP | ↑ | ↑ genes involved in antigen presentation, Th1 chemokine signaling and IFN response |
↓ Downregulation or decrease; ↑ Upregulation or increase; IFN: interferon; NEI: No effect was investigated; TAMs: tumor-associated macrophages; Tregs: regulatory T cells.
Epigenetic regulation of PD-L1: human studies on prostatic adenocarcinoma.
| Ref. | Samples | GG/Stage | Results |
|---|---|---|---|
| [ | 30 PC | NR | Inverse correlation between PD-L1 and miR-15a levels. Significantly higher KCNQ1OT1, PD-L1, and CD8 expression in PCs than BPT (lower miR-15a levels). |
| [ | 66 mCRPC (RP, MTS) | GG: 1–5 | MLL3 and PD-L1 RNA levels positively correlated to PSA (not GG, age or stage). In 23 paired castration-resistant PC samples, higher MLL3 and PD-L1 RNA levels in MTS than in primary PC samples. |
| [ | 40 PC (ff) | NR | miR-195 and miR-16 expression inversely correlated to PD-L1 levels in PC. |
| [ | TC: 498 PC (TCGA); | GG: 1–5 | Lower levels of mPD-L1 in normal prostate (vs. PC). On multivariate analysis, mPD-L1high (HR = 1.22 [95%CI: 1.05–1.42] |
| [ | 495 (TCGA) | NR | |
| [ | NR (TCGA) | NR | In TCGA series, PD-L1 expression was positively associated to lncAMPC (long non-coding RNA NR_046357.1)-activated LIF levels and |
| [ | 535 (RP) (°) | GG: 1–5 | Significant correlations between mir-424-3p (in situ hybridization) and the following: high GG (r = 0.12, |
| [ | 262 (RP) | GG: 2-3 | PD-L1 positivity rate (immunohistochemistry, clone E1L3N, Cell Signaling Technology) was significantly higher in samples showing WDR5 overexpression. The TCGA database confirmed a positive correlation between WDR5 and PD-L1 mRNA levels. |
(°): for PD-L1 and CTLA-4 correlations, a previous series of 402 RP was used [83]. BPT: benign prostatic tissue; BRFS: biochemical recurrence-free survival; CI: Confidence Interval; ff: fresh frozen tissue; GG: Grade Group; HR: hazard radio; mCRPC: metastatic castration-resistant prostate cancer; mCXCL12: methylation of CXCL12; mPD-L1: methylation of PD-L1 promoter; MTS: metastases; NR: not reported; PC: prostate cancer; PCR: Polymerase chain reaction; pePD-L1: PD-L1 protein expression; Ref: reference; RP: radical prostatectomy; TC: training cohort; TCGA: The Cancer Genome Atlas database; VC: validation cohort.