作者
Tommaso Scolaro,Marta Manco,Mathieu Pecqueux,Ricardo Amorim,Rosa Trotta,Heleen H. Van Acker,Matthias Van Haele,Niranjan Shirgaonkar,Stefan Naulaerts,Jan Daniluk,Fran Prenen,Chiara Varamo,Donatella Ponti,Ginevra Doglioni,Ana Margarida Ferreira Campos,Juan Fernández-García,Silvia Radenkovic,Pegah Rouhi,Aleksandar Beatovic,Liwei Wang,Yu Wang,Amalia Tzoumpa,Asier Antoranz,Ara Sargsian,Mario Di Matteo,Emanuele Berardi,Jermaine Goveia,Bart Ghesquière,Tania Roskams,Stefaan J. Soenen,Thomas Voets,Bella B. Manshian,Sarah‐Maria Fendt,Peter Carmeliet,Abhishek D. Garg,Ramanuj DasGupta,Baki Topal,Massimiliano Mazzone
摘要
Abstract Many individuals with cancer are resistant to immunotherapies. Here, we identify the gene encoding the pyrimidine salvage pathway enzyme cytidine deaminase (CDA) among the top upregulated metabolic genes in several immunotherapy-resistant tumors. We show that CDA in cancer cells contributes to the uridine diphosphate (UDP) pool. Extracellular UDP hijacks immunosuppressive tumor-associated macrophages (TAMs) through its receptor P2Y 6 . Pharmacologic or genetic inhibition of CDA in cancer cells (or P2Y 6 in TAMs) disrupts TAM-mediated immunosuppression, promoting cytotoxic T cell entry and susceptibility to anti-programmed cell death protein 1 (anti-PD-1) treatment in resistant pancreatic ductal adenocarcinoma (PDAC) and melanoma models. Conversely, CDA overexpression in CDA-depleted PDACs or anti-PD-1-responsive colorectal tumors or systemic UDP administration (re)establishes resistance. In individuals with PDAC, high CDA levels in cancer cells correlate with increased TAMs, lower cytotoxic T cells and possibly anti-PD-1 resistance. In a pan-cancer single-cell atlas, CDA high cancer cells match with T cell cytotoxicity dysfunction and P2RY6 high TAMs. Overall, we suggest CDA and P2Y 6 as potential targets for cancer immunotherapy.