Abstract
Abstract Glioblastoma (GBM) is an aggressive cancer that has been largely intractable to novel therapies, however, enhancing the efficacy of immunotherapy could potentially overcome immunosuppression and potentially improve patient outcomes. The cellular stress induced by Temozolomide (TMZ) increases innate immune ligands, which could be exploited to promote immune recognition. TMZ-induced DNA damage can activate the stress response pathway, increasing the expression of NKG2D ligands (NKG2DL) on tumor cells. This leads to an increase in NKG2DL recognition by NKG2D receptors on both natural killer and cytotoxic T-cells to elicit a cytotoxic effect. The lymphodepleting effect of TMZ, however, can limit the ability of these cells to recognize and kill tumor cells. TMZ was shown to induce NKG2DL in gliomas both in vitro and in vivo, providing the basis for clinical trials of TMZ in combination with genetically engineered TMZ-resistant gamma delta T-cells (NCT04165941). To further promote immune recognition, we sought to augment the TMZ-induced stress response by exploring the combination of DNA alkylation with either PARP (Niraparib) or ATM Kinase inhibition (AZD1390). Combinatorial therapy significantly, but heterogeneously, increased differential subsets of NKG2DL genes in comparison to TMZ alone in GBM cells isolated from patient derived xenografts (PDX): 1) MICA and MICB were increased at least 10-fold in D456 (proneural) cells; 2) ULBP1 and ULBP2 were increased at least 2-fold in JX39 (classical) cells; and 3) minimal increases in NKG2DLs were observed in JX22 (mesenchymal) cells. Repression of NKG2DLs by hypoxia/low glucose was also heterogeneous, being observed in two of three GBM models tested. We are currently determining whether these combinatorial treatments improve gamma delta T-cell cytotoxicity against GBM cells and in vivo tumor models. Taken together, our data suggest that enhancing cell stress responses induced by chemotherapies may permit novel immunotherapy therapeutic interventions for brain tumor patients.
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