HSP90A inhibition promotes anti-tumor immunity by reversing multi-modal resistance and stem-like property of immune-refractory tumors

Cancer immunotherapy has emerged as a promising cancer treatment. However, the presence of immune-refractory tumor cells limits its clinical success by blocking amplification of anti-tumor immunity. Previously, we found that immune selection by immunotherapy drives the evolution of tumors toward mul...

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Veröffentlicht in:Nature communications 2020-01, Vol.11 (1), p.562-562, Article 562
Hauptverfasser: Song, Kwon-Ho, Oh, Se Jin, Kim, Suyeon, Cho, Hanbyoul, Lee, Hyo-Jung, Song, Joon Seon, Chung, Joon-Yong, Cho, Eunho, Lee, Jaeyoon, Jeon, Seunghyun, Yee, Cassian, Lee, Kyung-Mi, Hewitt, Stephen M., Kim, Jae-Hoon, Woo, Seon Rang, Kim, Tae Woo
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Cancer immunotherapy has emerged as a promising cancer treatment. However, the presence of immune-refractory tumor cells limits its clinical success by blocking amplification of anti-tumor immunity. Previously, we found that immune selection by immunotherapy drives the evolution of tumors toward multi-modal resistant and stem-like phenotypes via transcription induction of AKT co-activator TCL1A by NANOG. Here, we report a crucial role of HSP90A at the crossroads between NANOG-TCL1A axis and multi-aggressive properties of immune-edited tumor cells by identifying HSP90AA1 as a NANOG transcriptional target. Furthermore, we demonstrate that HSP90A potentiates AKT activation through TCL1A-stabilization, thereby contributing to the multi-aggressive properties in NANOG high tumor cells. Importantly, HSP90 inhibition sensitized immune-refractory tumor to adoptive T cell transfer as well as PD-1 blockade, and re-invigorated the immune cycle of tumor-reactive T cells. Our findings implicate that the HSP90A-TCL1A-AKT pathway ignited by NANOG is a central molecular axis and a potential target for immune-refractory tumor. Nanog can confer resistance to cancer immunotherapy by promoting AKT activity. Here, the authors demonstrate that HSP90A is a Nanog target that stabilizes the AKT coactivator TCL1, thereby activating AKT, and that HSP90A inhibition can enhance the anti-tumor efficacy of adoptive T cell transfer and checkpoint blockade.
ISSN:2041-1723
2041-1723
DOI:10.1038/s41467-019-14259-y