Abstract

In recent years, therapy with immune modulating antibodies, termed immune checkpoint blockade (ICB), has revolutionized the treatment of advanced metastatic melanoma, yielding long-lasting clinical responses in a subgroup of patients. But despite this remarkable progress, resistance to therapy represents a major clinical challenge. ICB efficacy is critically dependent on cytotoxic CD8+ T cells targeting tumor cells in an HLA class I (HLA-I) antigen-dependent manner. Transcriptional suppression of the HLA-I antigen processing and presentation machinery (HLA-I APM) in melanoma cells leads to HLA-I-low/-negative tumor cell phenotypes escaping CD8+ T cell recognition and contributing to ICB resistance. In general, HLA-I-low/-negative tumor cells can be re-sensitized to T cells by interferons (IFN), augmenting HLA-I APM expression. However, this mechanism fails when melanoma cells acquire resistance to IFN, which recently turned out as a key resistance mechanism in ICB, besides HLA-I APM suppression. Seeking for a strategy to overcome these barriers, we identified a novel mechanism that restores HLA-I antigen presentation in tumor cells independent of IFN (Such et al. (2020) J Clin Invest, doi: 10.1172/JCI131572). We demonstrated that tumor cell-intrinsic activation of the cytosolic innate immunoreceptor RIG-I by its synthetic ligand 3pRNA overcomes transcriptional HLA-I APM suppression in patient-derived IFN-resistant melanoma cells. De novo HLA-I APM expression is IRF1/IRF3-dependent and re-sensitizes melanoma cells to autologous cytotoxic CD8+ T cells. Notably, synthetic RIG-I ligands and ICB synergize in T cell activation, suggesting combinational therapy could be an efficient strategy to improve patient outcomes in melanoma.

Highlights

  • We aimed to elucidate resistance mechanisms in immune checkpoint blockade (ICB) in order to improve patient outcome and identified the development of poorly immunogenic HLA class I (HLA-I)-low and HLA-Inegative tumor phenotypes as a barrier to effective immunotherapy

  • HLA CLASS I-LOW/-NEGATIVE MELANOMA CELL PHENOTYPES AND DEFECTIVE INTERFERON SIGNALING IN RESISTANCE TO IMMUNE CHECKPOINT BLOCKADE Melanoma immunotherapy exploits the capability of cytotoxic CD8+ T cells to selectively kill tumor cells. This selectivity is achieved by the T cell receptor binding to specific HLA class I (HLA-I) antigen complexes on melanoma cells

  • In the tumor microenvironment T cell activity is blocked by the inhibitory co-receptor PD-1, signaling upon engagement of its ligand PD-L1 on melanoma cells

Read more

Summary

Introduction

We aimed to elucidate resistance mechanisms in ICB in order to improve patient outcome and identified the development of poorly immunogenic HLA-I-low and HLA-Inegative tumor phenotypes as a barrier to effective immunotherapy.

Objectives
Results
Conclusion
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call