Liu Wei, Kim Gloria B, Krump Nathan A, Zhou Yuqi, Riley James L, You Jianxin
Department of Microbiology, Perelman School of Medicine, University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia, PA 19104.
Center for Cellular Immunotherapies, Perelman School of Medicine, University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia, PA 19104.
Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A. 2020 Jun 16;117(24):13730-13739. doi: 10.1073/pnas.1919690117. Epub 2020 Jun 1.
Merkel cell carcinoma (MCC) is a lethal skin cancer that metastasizes rapidly. Few effective treatments are available for patients with metastatic MCC. Poor intratumoral T cell infiltration and activation are major barriers that prevent MCC eradication by the immune system. However, the mechanisms that drive the immunologically restrictive tumor microenvironment remain poorly understood. In this study, we discovered that the innate immune regulator stimulator of IFN genes (STING) is completely silenced in MCCs. To reactivate STING in MCC, we developed an application of a human STING mutant, STING, which we found to be readily stimulated by a mouse STING agonist, DMXAA. This STING molecule was efficiently delivered to MCC cells via an AAV vector. Introducing STING expression and stimulating its activity by DMXAA in MCC cells reactivates their antitumor inflammatory cytokine/chemokine production. In response to MCC cells with restored STING, cocultured T cells expressing MCPyV-specific T cell receptors (TCRs) show increased cytokine production, migration toward tumor cells, and tumor cell killing. Our study therefore suggests that STING deficiency contributes to the immune suppressive nature of MCCs. More importantly, DMXAA stimulation of STING causes robust cell death in MCCs as well as several other STING-silenced cancers. Because tumor antigens and DNA released by dying cancer cells have the potential to amplify innate immune response and activate antitumor adaptive responses, our finding indicates that targeted delivery and activation of STING in tumor cells holds great therapeutic promise for the treatment of MCC and many other STING-deficient cancers.
默克尔细胞癌(MCC)是一种致死性皮肤癌,转移迅速。对于转移性MCC患者,几乎没有有效的治疗方法。肿瘤内T细胞浸润和激活不足是免疫系统清除MCC的主要障碍。然而,驱动免疫限制性肿瘤微环境的机制仍知之甚少。在本研究中,我们发现先天性免疫调节因子干扰素基因刺激物(STING)在MCC中完全沉默。为了在MCC中重新激活STING,我们开发了一种人STING突变体的应用,我们发现该突变体很容易被小鼠STING激动剂DMXAA刺激。这种STING分子通过腺相关病毒载体有效地递送至MCC细胞。在MCC细胞中引入STING表达并通过DMXAA刺激其活性可重新激活其抗肿瘤炎性细胞因子/趋化因子的产生。针对具有恢复STING的MCC细胞,共培养的表达MCPyV特异性T细胞受体(TCR)的T细胞显示出细胞因子产生增加、向肿瘤细胞迁移以及肿瘤细胞杀伤能力增强。因此,我们的研究表明STING缺陷促成了MCC的免疫抑制特性。更重要的是,DMXAA刺激STING会导致MCC以及其他几种STING沉默的癌症发生强烈的细胞死亡。由于垂死癌细胞释放的肿瘤抗原和DNA有可能放大先天性免疫反应并激活抗肿瘤适应性反应,我们的发现表明在肿瘤细胞中靶向递送和激活STING对治疗MCC和许多其他STING缺陷型癌症具有巨大的治疗前景。