作者
Tae Kon Kim,Xue Han,Qianni Hu,Esten N. Vandsemb,Carly M. Fielder,Junshik Hong,Kwang Woon Kim,Emily F. Mason,Rosalind Plowman,Jun Wang,Qi Wang,Jianping Zhang,Ti Badri,Miguel F. Sanmamed,Linghua Zheng,Tianxiang Zhang,Jude Alawa,Sang Won Lee,Amer M. Zeidan,Stephanie Halene,Manoj M. Pillai,Namrata Sonia Chandhok,Jun Lü,Mina L. Xu,Steven D. Gore,Lieping Chen
摘要
Acute myeloid leukemia (AML) presents a pressing medical need in that it is largely resistant to standard chemotherapy as well as modern therapeutics such as targeted therapy and immunotherapy, including anti-PD therapy. We demonstrate that Programmed Death-1 Homolog (PD-1H), an immune co-inhibitory molecule is highly expressed in blasts from the bone marrow of AML patients, while normal myeloid cell subsets and T cells have the expression of PD-1H. In studies employing syngeneic and humanized AML mouse models, overexpression of PD-1H promoted the growth of AML cells, mainly by evading T cell-mediated immune responses. Importantly, ablation of AML cell surface PD-1H by antibody blockade or genetic targeting significantly inhibited AML progression by promoting T cell activity. In addition, the genetic deletion of PD-1H from host normal myeloid cells inhibited AML progression as well and the combination of PD-1H blockade with PD-1 blockade conferred a synergistic anti-leukemia effect. Our findings provide the basis for PD-1H as an attractive therapeutic target to treat human AML.