Department of Immunology, University of Texas MD Anderson Cancer Center, Houston, TX, USA.
University of Texas MD Anderson Cancer Center UTHealth Graduate School of Biomedical Sciences, University of Texas Health Science Center at Houston, Houston, TX, USA.
Sci Immunol. 2022 Jun 10;7(72):eabl9330. doi: 10.1126/sciimmunol.abl9330.
Radiotherapy (RT) of colorectal cancer (CRC) can prime adaptive immunity against tumor-associated antigen (TAA)-expressing CRC cells systemically. However, abscopal tumor remissions are extremely rare, and the postirradiation immune escape mechanisms in CRC remain elusive. Here, we found that irradiated CRC cells used ATR-mediated DNA repair signaling pathway to up-regulate both CD47 and PD-L1, which through engagement of SIRPα and PD-1, respectively, prevented phagocytosis by antigen-presenting cells and thereby limited TAA cross-presentation and innate immune activation. This postirradiation CD47 and PD-L1 up-regulation was observed across various human solid tumor cells. Concordantly, rectal cancer patients with poor responses to neoadjuvant RT exhibited significantly elevated postirradiation CD47 levels. The combination of RT, anti-SIRPα, and anti-PD-1 reversed adaptive immune resistance and drove efficient TAA cross-presentation, resulting in robust TAA-specific CD8 T cell priming, functional activation of T effectors, and increased T cell clonality and clonal diversity. We observed significantly higher complete response rates to RT/anti-SIRPα/anti-PD-1 in both irradiated and abscopal tumors and prolonged survival in three distinct murine CRC models, including a cecal orthotopic model. The efficacy of triple combination therapy was STING dependent as knockout animals lost most benefit of adding anti-SIRPα and anti-PD-1 to RT. Despite activation across the myeloid stroma, the enhanced dendritic cell function accounts for most improvements in CD8 T cell priming. These data suggest ATR-mediated CD47 and PD-L1 up-regulation as a key mechanism restraining radiation-induced immune priming. RT combined with SIRPα and PD-1 blockade promotes robust antitumor immune priming, leading to systemic tumor regressions.
放射治疗(RT)可使结直肠癌(CRC)中的适应性免疫针对肿瘤相关抗原(TAA)表达的 CRC 细胞进行全身攻击。然而,肿瘤的远隔效应极为罕见,CRC 中放射后免疫逃逸机制仍不清楚。在这里,我们发现受照射的 CRC 细胞利用 ATR 介导的 DNA 修复信号通路上调 CD47 和 PD-L1 的表达,分别通过 SIRPα和 PD-1 的结合,防止抗原呈递细胞吞噬,从而限制 TAA 的交叉呈递和固有免疫的激活。这种照射后 CD47 和 PD-L1 的上调在各种人类实体肿瘤细胞中都有观察到。与此一致的是,对新辅助 RT 反应不佳的直肠癌患者表现出明显升高的照射后 CD47 水平。RT、抗 SIRPα和抗 PD-1 的联合使用逆转了适应性免疫抵抗,并驱动有效的 TAA 交叉呈递,从而产生强大的 TAA 特异性 CD8 T 细胞启动、T 效应器的功能激活以及 T 细胞克隆性和克隆多样性的增加。我们观察到在受照射和远隔肿瘤中,RT/抗 SIRPα/抗 PD-1 的完全缓解率显著提高,并在三个不同的结直肠癌小鼠模型中延长了生存时间,包括盲肠原位模型。三重联合治疗的疗效依赖于 STING,因为敲除动物失去了在 RT 中加入抗 SIRPα和抗 PD-1 的大部分益处。尽管在髓样基质中激活,但增强的树突状细胞功能解释了 CD8 T 细胞启动的大部分改善。这些数据表明,ATR 介导的 CD47 和 PD-L1 的上调是限制放射诱导免疫启动的关键机制。RT 联合 SIRPα和 PD-1 阻断可促进强大的抗肿瘤免疫启动,导致全身肿瘤消退。