Abstract

Murine and human invariant natural killer T (iNKT) lymphocytes are activated by α-galactosylceramide (α-GalCer) presented on CD1d. α-GalCer was first described as a lipid that had strong anti-metastatic effects in a mouse melanoma model, and it has subsequently been shown to induce efficient iNKT cell dependent tumor immunity in several tumor models. We have shown that α-GalCer treatment leads to a weak reduction of polyp burden in the autochthonous ApcMin/+ mouse model for human colon cancer, however this treatment resulted in upregulation of the inhibitory receptor PD-1 on iNKT cells. While anti-PD-1 treatment can prevent immune-suppression in other cancer types, human colon cancer is generally resistant to this treatment. Here we have used the ApcMin/+ model to investigate whether a combined treatment with α-GalCer and PD-1 blockade results in improved effects on polyp development. We find that PD-1 expression was high on T cells in polyps and lamina propria (LP) of ApcMin/+ mice compared to polyp free Apc+/+ littermates. Anti-PD-1 treatment alone promoted Tbet expression in iNKT cells and CD4 T cells, but did not significantly reduce polyp numbers. However, the combined treatment with anti-PD-1 and α-GalCer had synergistic effects, resulting in highly significant reduction of polyp numbers in the small and large intestine. Addition of PD-1 blockade to α-GalCer treatment prevented loss of iNKT cells that were skewed towards a TH1-like iNKT1 phenotype specifically in polyps. It also resulted in TH1 skewing and increased granzyme B expression of CD4 T cells. Taken together this demonstrates that a combination of immune stimulation targeting iNKT cells and checkpoint blockade may be a promising approach to develop for improved tumor immunotherapy.

Highlights

  • The CD1d-restricted natural killer T (NKT) cells are an unconventional T cell subset with immunoregulatory potential

  • This indicates that T cells in lamina propria (LP) and polyps of ApcMin/+ mice may be negatively regulated by PD-1, resulting in dampening of T cell activation

  • PD-1 is often upregulated on T cells in the tumor environment, and the ligand PD-L1 is expressed on a multitude of tumor cells, as well as immune cells, leading to exhaustion and anergy of tumor infiltrating T cells after ligation of PD-1

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Summary

Introduction

The CD1d-restricted natural killer T (NKT) cells are an unconventional T cell subset with immunoregulatory potential. Numerous studies have been performed in which a-GalCer has been successfully used to modulate immune responses in experimental tumor models [9,10,11]. This has led to clinical trials that apply iNKT cell activation to enhance anti-tumor immune activity in cancer patients [8, 12,13,14,15]

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