作者
Hongru Zhang,Pengfei Yu,Vivek S. Tomar,Xiangjie Chen,Matthew J. Atherton,Zhen Lu,Zhang Hongguang,Shifeng Li,Angélica Ortiz,Jun Gui,N. Adrian Leu,Fangxue Yan,Mario Andrés Blanco,Mirella L. Meyer‐Ficca,Ralph G. Meyer,Daniel P. Beiting,Jinyang Li,Selene Nuñez-Cruz,Roddy S. O’Connor,Lexus R. Johnson,Andy J. Minn,Subin S. George,Constantinos Koumenis,J. Alan Diehl,Michael C. Milone,Hui Zheng,Serge Y. Fuchs
摘要
Evasion of antitumor immunity and resistance to therapies in solid tumors are aided by an immunosuppressive tumor microenvironment (TME). We found that TME factors, such as regulatory T cells and adenosine, downregulated type I interferon receptor IFNAR1 on CD8+ cytotoxic T lymphocytes (CTLs). These events relied upon poly-ADP ribose polymerase-11 (PARP11), which was induced in intratumoral CTLs and acted as a key regulator of the immunosuppressive TME. Ablation of PARP11 prevented loss of IFNAR1, increased CTL tumoricidal activity and inhibited tumor growth in an IFNAR1-dependent manner. Accordingly, genetic or pharmacologic inactivation of PARP11 augmented the therapeutic benefits of chimeric antigen receptor T cells. Chimeric antigen receptor CTLs engineered to inactivate PARP11 demonstrated a superior efficacy against solid tumors. These findings highlight the role of PARP11 in the immunosuppressive TME and provide a proof of principle for targeting this pathway to optimize immune therapies. Fuchs and colleagues delineate a mechanism by which PARP11-mediated IFNAR1 loss sustains an immunosuppressive tumor microenvironment and show that PARP11 inactivation can enhance chimeric antigen receptor T efficacy in preclinical solid tumor models.