Abstract We investigated the interplay between immunosuppressive TGFβ signaling and immunogenic DNA repair in response to immune checkpoint inhibition (ICI) in a new model of breast cancer. Transforming growth factor beta (TGFβ) is a canonical suppressor. Cancer cells evade TGFβ either by selectively overcoming TGFβ proliferative barrier or completely shutting down signaling. Loss of TGFβ signaling is accompanied by high immunosuppressive TGFβ activity. We have shown that loss of TGFβ is critical to genomic integrity. It endorses classical DNA repair and inhibits error-prone repair. We described a score, βAlt, that reports the TGFβ/DNA repair functional relationship. Pan-cancer analysis showed that high βAlt cancers, in which the TGFβ target signature is low and DNA repair signature is high, use error-prone DNA repair, are sensitive to chemoradiation and have a greater fraction of the genome altered compared to low βAlt cancers, which maintain TGFβ signaling. We established a novel murine tumor derived transplant model (mTDT) of triple-negative breast cancer, similar to a human PDX, in immunocompetent BALB/cJ mice. Transcriptomics analysis showed that mTDT range from high to low βAlt and from immune poor to immune rich, which was confirmed by multiplex immunstaining. Unsupervised clustering of mTDT based on βAlt score demonstrated that low βAlt was associated with immune rich tumors while high βAlt was associated with immune poor tumors. A similar relationship is evident in the TCGA breast cancers. We then asked how mTDT respond to ICI. Mice bearing mTDT were randomized to monotherapy consisting of single fraction 10 Gy radiation, anti-PD-L1 or TGFβ inhibition, dual or triple treatment. Neither anti-PD-L1 or TGFβ inhibition affected survival, alone or in combination, whereas radiation significantly increased survival. Unexpectedly immune poor, high βAlt mTDT were the most responsive. To evaluate biological correlates, mice were stratified as a function of treatment as responders, in which tumor growth was controlled for 7 days post-treatment, or non-responders, in which tumor growth was uncontrolled. Tumor infiltrating CD45+ cells increased (P=0.02) as did circulating CD8 T cells (P<0.001) in responders. Natural killer (NK) cells were also significantly expanded in responders (P<0.001). TGFβ broadly downregulates chemokine receptor expression necessary to recruit NK cells and impairs NK cell cytotoxic effector function. We depleted NK cells to test whether they were necessary for the pronounced response to triple treatment. NK depletion was completely abrogated response (P<0.00001) indicating NK cells can provoke an ICI response in high βAlt mammary tumors devoid of lymphocytes. This preclinical model and human breast cancer shows that loss of TGFβ signaling resulting in error-prone DNA damage response is strongly associated with immune poor tumors, and suggests that TGFβ inhibition can override NK cell dysfunction to create vulnerability to ICI and anti-tumor immunity. Citation Format: Jade Moore, Jim Gkantalis, Ines Guix, Colin Foster, Mary Helen Barcellos-Hoff. Compromised TGFβ signaling and DNA repair primes response to immune checkpoint inhibition by activating NK cells in immunologically cold breast cancers [abstract]. In: Proceedings of the AACR Special Conference in Cancer Research: Advances in Breast Cancer Research; 2023 Oct 19-22; San Diego, California. Philadelphia (PA): AACR; Cancer Res 2024;84(3 Suppl_1):Abstract nr B032.