| Literature DB >> 35687697 |
Rodney Cheng-En Hsieh1,2,3, Sunil Krishnan4, Ren-Chin Wu5, Akash R Boda1,2, Arthur Liu1,2, Michelle Winkler1,2, Wen-Hao Hsu2,6, Steven Hsesheng Lin2,7, Mien-Chie Hung8,9, Li-Chuan Chan8, Krithikaa Rajkumar Bhanu1,2, Anupallavi Srinivasamani1,2, Ricardo Alexandre De Azevedo1, Yung-Chih Chou3, Ronald A DePinho2,6, Matthew Gubin1,2,10, Eduardo Vilar2,11,12, Chao Hsien Chen1,2,13, Ravaen Slay1,2, Priyamvada Jayaprakash1, Shweta Mahendra Hegde1, Genevieve Hartley1, Spencer T Lea1,2, Rishika Prasad1,2, Brittany Morrow1,2, Coline Agnes Couillault1, Madeline Steiner1,2, Chun-Chieh Wang3, Bhanu Prasad Venkatesulu14, Cullen Taniguchi2,7,15, Yon Son Betty Kim16, Junjie Chen2,15, Nils-Petter Rudqvist1,2, Michael A Curran1,2.
Abstract
Radiotherapy (RT) of colorectal cancer (CRC) can prime adaptive immunity against tumor-associated antigen (TAA)-expressing CRC cells systemically. However, abscopal tumor remissions are extremely rare, and the postirradiation immune escape mechanisms in CRC remain elusive. Here, we found that irradiated CRC cells used ATR-mediated DNA repair signaling pathway to up-regulate both CD47 and PD-L1, which through engagement of SIRPα and PD-1, respectively, prevented phagocytosis by antigen-presenting cells and thereby limited TAA cross-presentation and innate immune activation. This postirradiation CD47 and PD-L1 up-regulation was observed across various human solid tumor cells. Concordantly, rectal cancer patients with poor responses to neoadjuvant RT exhibited significantly elevated postirradiation CD47 levels. The combination of RT, anti-SIRPα, and anti-PD-1 reversed adaptive immune resistance and drove efficient TAA cross-presentation, resulting in robust TAA-specific CD8 T cell priming, functional activation of T effectors, and increased T cell clonality and clonal diversity. We observed significantly higher complete response rates to RT/anti-SIRPα/anti-PD-1 in both irradiated and abscopal tumors and prolonged survival in three distinct murine CRC models, including a cecal orthotopic model. The efficacy of triple combination therapy was STING dependent as knockout animals lost most benefit of adding anti-SIRPα and anti-PD-1 to RT. Despite activation across the myeloid stroma, the enhanced dendritic cell function accounts for most improvements in CD8 T cell priming. These data suggest ATR-mediated CD47 and PD-L1 up-regulation as a key mechanism restraining radiation-induced immune priming. RT combined with SIRPα and PD-1 blockade promotes robust antitumor immune priming, leading to systemic tumor regressions.Entities:
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Year: 2022 PMID: 35687697 PMCID: PMC9373855 DOI: 10.1126/sciimmunol.abl9330
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sci Immunol ISSN: 2470-9468