BCL9 regulates CD226 and CD96 checkpoints in CD8+ T cells to improve PD-1 response in cancer

被引:0
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作者
Mei Feng
Zhongen Wu
Yan Zhou
Zhuang Wei
Enming Tian
Shenglin Mei
Yuanyuan Zhu
Chenglong Liu
Fenglian He
Huiyu Li
Cao Xie
Joy Jin
Jibin Dong
Dehua Yang
Ker Yu
Junbin Qian
Diether Lambrechts
Ming-Wei Wang
Di Zhu
机构
[1] Fudan University,Department of Pharmacology, School of Basic Medical Sciences and School of Pharmacy
[2] Fudan University,School of Pharmacy
[3] Chinese Academy of Sciences,Key Laboratory of Systems Biology, Innovation Center for Cell Signaling Network, CAS Center for Excellence in Molecular Cell Science, Institute of Biochemistry and Cell Biology, Shanghai Institutes for Biological Sciences
[4] Tongji University,Clinical Translational Research Center, Shanghai Pulmonary Hospital, School of Life Science and Technology
[5] University of California at San Francisco,School of Medicine
[6] Zhejiang University School of Medicine,Department of Gynecologic Oncology, Women’s Hospital
[7] Department of Human Genetics,VIB Center for Cancer Biology and Laboratory for Translational Genetics
[8] KU Leuven,School of Life Science and Technology
[9] ShanghaiTech University,The National Center for Drug Screening and the CAS Key Laboratory of Receptor Research, Shanghai Institute of Materia Medica
[10] Chinese Academy of Sciences (CAS),Shanghai Engineering Research Center of Immune Therapy and Key Laboratory of Smart Drug Delivery
[11] Fudan University,undefined
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摘要
To date, the overall response rate of PD-1 blockade remains unsatisfactory, partially due to limited understanding of tumor immune microenvironment (TIME). B-cell lymphoma 9 (BCL9), a key transcription co-activator of the Wnt pathway, is highly expressed in cancers. By genetic depletion and pharmacological inhibition of BCL9 in tumors, we found that BCL9 suppression reduced tumor growth, promoted CD8+ T cell tumor infiltration, and enhanced response to anti-PD-1 treatment in mouse colon cancer models. To determine the underlying mechanism of BCL9’s role in TIME regulation, single-cell RNA-seq was applied to reveal cellular landscape and transcription differences in the tumor immune microenvironment upon BCL9 inhibition. CD155-CD226 and CD155-CD96 checkpoints play key roles in cancer cell/CD8+ T cell interaction. BCL9 suppression induces phosphorylation of VAV1 in CD8+ T cells and increases GLI1 and PATCH expression to promote CD155 expression in cancer cells. In The Cancer Genome Atlas database analysis, we found that BCL9 expression is positively associated with CD155 and negatively associated with CD226 expression. BCL9 is also linked to adenomatous polyposis coli (APC) mutation involved in patient survival following anti-PD-1 treatment. This study points to cellular diversity within the tumor immune microenvironment affected by BCL9 inhibition and provides new insights into the role of BCL9 in regulating CD226 and CD96 checkpoints
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