Abstract
Transforming Growth Factor β (TGFβ) is a key mediator of immune evasion in pancreatic ductal adenocarcinoma (PDAC), and the addition of TGFβ inhibitors in select immunotherapy regimens shows early promise. Though the TGFβ target SMAD4 is deleted in approximately 55% of PDAC tumors, the effects of SMAD4 loss on tumor immunity have yet to be fully explored. Using a combination of genomic databases and PDAC specimens, we found that tumors with loss of SMAD4 have a comparatively poor T-cell infiltrate. SMAD4 loss was also associated with a reduction in several chemokines with known roles in T-cell recruitment, which was recapitulated using knockdown of SMAD4 in PDAC cell lines. Accordingly, JURKAT T-cells were poorly attracted to conditioned media from PDAC cells with knockdown of SMAD4 and lost their ability to produce IFNγ. However, while exogenous TGFβ modestly reduced PD-L1 expression in SMAD4-intact cell lines, SMAD4 and PD-L1 positively correlated in human PDAC samples. PD-L1 status was closely related to tumor-infiltrating lymphocytes, particularly IFNγ-producing T-cells, which were more abundant in SMAD4-expressing tumors. Low concentrations of IFNγ upregulated PD-L1 in tumor cells in vitro, even when administered alongside high concentrations of TGFβ. Hence, while SMAD4 may have a modest inhibitory effect on PD-L1 in tumor cells, SMAD4 indirectly promotes PD-L1 expression in the pancreatic tumor microenvironment by enhancing T-cell infiltration and IFNγ biosynthesis. These data suggest that pancreatic cancers with loss of SMAD4 represent a poorly immunogenic disease subtype, and SMAD4 status warrants further exploration as a predictive biomarker for cancer immunotherapy.
Highlights
Progress in immunotherapy for pancreatic cancer has been difficult
Though patients with microsatellite instability-high (MSI-H) pancreatic ductal adenocarcinoma (PDAC) have derived clinical benefit from immune checkpoint inhibitors (ICIs) in clinical trials [10], less than 1% of PDAC patients are deficient in mismatch repair, and the majority will not benefit from such an approach [11]
Given the limitations of using bulk tumor mRNA sequencing data from publicly available datasets, we explored the relationship between SMAD4 expression and tumor immunogenicity in 36 human PDAC excisional biopsies
Summary
Progress in immunotherapy for pancreatic cancer has been difficult. Though immune checkpoint inhibitors (ICIs) have shown therapeutic efficacy in several solid tumors [1,2,3,4,5,6,7], clinical trials exploring such approaches in pancreatic cancer have been mostly disappointing, with few showing significant anti-tumor activity [8]. There is a notable exception for a particular genomic subgroup of PDAC patients, namely those deficient in DNA mismatch repair. This results in the accumulation of DNA mismatches, which manifest as a microsatellite instability-high (MSI-H) phenotype. Though patients with MSI-H PDAC have derived clinical benefit from ICIs in clinical trials [10], less than 1% of PDAC patients are deficient in mismatch repair, and the majority will not benefit from such an approach [11]
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