Abstract

BackgroundThe anti-tumor immunity of natural killer (NK) cells can be paralyzed by the CD73-induced generation of immunosuppressive adenosine from precursor ATP within the hypoxic microenvironment of solid tumors. In an effort to redirect purinergic immunosuppression of NK cell anti-tumor function, we showed, for the first time, that immunometabolic combination treatment with NKG2D-engineered CAR-NK cells alongside blockade of CD73 ectonucleotidase activity can result in significant anti-tumor responses in vivo.MethodsNK cells were engineered non-virally with NKG2D.CAR-presenting vectors based on the piggyBac transposon system with DAP10 and CD3ζ co-signaling domains. The anti-tumor immunity of NKG2D.CAR.NK cells in combination with CD73 targeting was evaluated against multiple solid tumor targets in vitro and humanized mouse xenografts in immunodeficient tumor-bearing mice in vivo. Intratumoral migration was evaluated via immunohistochemical staining, while degranulation capacity and IFN-γ production of NK cells were measured in response to solid tumor targets.ResultsOur results showed that CD73 blockade can mediate effective purinergic reprogramming and enhance anti-tumor cytotoxicity both in vitro and in vivo by enhancing the killing ability of CAR-engineered NK cells against CD73+ solid tumor targets via mechanisms that might imply alleviation from adenosinergic immunometabolic suppression. CD73 blockade improved the intratumoral homing of CD56+ CAR-NK cells in vivo. These engineered NK cells showed synergistic therapeutic efficacy in combination with CD73 targeting against CD73+ human lung cancer xenograft models. Interestingly, CD73 blockade could inhibit tumor growth in vivo independently of adaptive immune cells, innate immunity or NK cell-mediated ADCC.ConclusionsImmunotherapies targeting the adenosinergic signaling cascade, which act by neutralizing CD73 ectoenzymatic activity, had thus far not been evaluated in humanized tumor models, nor had the implication of innate immunity been investigated. Taken together, our pre-clinical efficacy data demonstrate, for the first time, the potential of targeting CD73 to modulate purinergic signaling and enhance adoptive NK cell immunotherapy via mechanisms that could implicate autocrine tumor control as well as by mediating adenosinergic signaling.

Highlights

  • The anti-tumor immunity of natural killer (NK) cells can be paralyzed by the CD73-induced generation of immunosuppressive adenosine from precursor Adenosine triphosphate (ATP) within the hypoxic microenvironment of solid tumors

  • The biodegradable Poly(beta-amino ester) (PBAE) 447 polymer synthesized according to previously published protocols (Additional file 1: Figure S1) [26] was used as the Chimeric antigen receptor (CAR) gene carrier

  • The vector, referred to as the transposon plasmid, was constructed with a gene expression cassette encoding the Natural killer group 2 D (NKG2D)-specific CAR, which is a fusion receptor composed of two identical extracellular human NKG2D domains combined with DAP10 and CD3ζ signaling domains (Fig. 1c)

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Summary

Introduction

The anti-tumor immunity of natural killer (NK) cells can be paralyzed by the CD73-induced generation of immunosuppressive adenosine from precursor ATP within the hypoxic microenvironment of solid tumors. Extracellular adenosine (ADO) generated in response to tumor microenvironment (TME) hypoxia has been recognized as a critical immunosuppressive metabolite that impairs anticancer immune responses [1, 2]. ADO disables cytotoxic effector functions of both CD8+ T and natural killer (NK) cells predominantly via A2A adenosine receptor signaling, enabling tumor immune evasion and escape [3, 4]. Arabella et al reported that co-inhibition of CD73 and adenosine A2A receptor signaling enhanced anti-tumor immune responses by improving recruitment of NK cells to tumor sites [11]. It is becoming evident that targeting the adenosinergic pathway holds significant potential for cancer treatment and can enhance adoptive immunotherapy

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