Epigenetic Scarring Leads to Irreversible NK Cell Dysfunction in Myeloid Malignancies
Myelodysplastic syndrome (MDS) and acute myeloid leukemia (AML) belong to the same spectrum of myeloid malignancies and have extremely poor outcomes in the relapsed/refractory setting. Despite advances in the understanding of the pathogenesis and molecular mechanisms of these disorders, and incremen...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Blood 2023-11, Vol.142 (Supplement 1), p.2088-2088 |
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Sprache: | eng |
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Zusammenfassung: | Myelodysplastic syndrome (MDS) and acute myeloid leukemia (AML) belong to the same spectrum of myeloid malignancies and have extremely poor outcomes in the relapsed/refractory setting. Despite advances in the understanding of the pathogenesis and molecular mechanisms of these disorders, and incremental improvements in treatment regimens, patients with MDS and AML often relapse and fail to achieve cure. These and other factors underscore the urgent need for new therapeutic alternatives that will improve the clinical outcomes of these patients. Immunotherapy using checkpoint molecule inhibitors and adoptive cell therapy using autologous immune effector cells have been mostly unsuccessful in patients with MDS and AML. This could be due to the immunosuppressive tumor microenvironment in the bone marrow niche or to intrinsic dysfunction in the immune effector cells of these patients.
Natural killer (NK) cells are innate lymphocytes that play an important role in cancer immune surveillance and have distinct advantages over T cells as candidates for immunotherapy. Myeloid blasts are inherently susceptible to NK cell-mediated killing as they express many of the ligands recognized by NK cell activating receptors. However, malignant myeloid blasts are capable of adapting and developing defense mechanisms that allow them to evade NK cell-mediated cytotoxicity. Little is known about the mechanisms of NK cell immune evasion developed by myeloid blasts. Here, we show that NK cells from patients with myeloid malignancies display a global dysfunction with severely impaired secretory function and killing capacity. Single cell RNAseq and mass cytometry experiments revealed that these NK cells from MDS and AML patients display an exhausted phenotype at the transcriptomic and proteomic levels. We also show that these NK cells have an altered metabolism compared with age matched healthy control NK cells. We show that this dysfunction is mediated by a crosstalk between myeloid blasts and NK cells and cell-cell contact dependent release of transforming growth factor beta (TGF-β). This crosstalk leads to a profound epigenetic reprogramming of NK cells driven by transcription factors known to mediate exhaustion and immune suppression. Myeloid blast-induced NK dysfunction and epigenetic state of exhaustion can be prevented by pharmacologically inhibiting the TGF-β pathway or knockout of TGFBR2 in NK cells. However, our data reveal that once this dysfunction occurs it is irreversibl |
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ISSN: | 0006-4971 1528-0020 |
DOI: | 10.1182/blood-2023-187626 |