作者
Giuseppe Leuzzi,Alessandro Vasciaveo,Angelo Taglialatela,Xiao Chen,Tessa M. Firestone,Allison R. Hickman,Wendy Mao,Tanay Thakar,Alina Vaitsiankova,Jen‐Wei Huang,Raquel Cuella-Martin,Samuel B. Hayward,Jordan S. Kesner,Ali Ghasemzadeh,Tarun S. Nambiar,Patricia Ho,Alexander Rialdi,Maxime Hebrard,Yinglu Li,Jinmei Gao,Saarang Gopinath,Oluwatobi A. Adeleke,Bryan J. Venters,Charles G. Drake,Richard Baer,Benjamin Izar,Ernesto Guccione,Michael‐Christopher Keogh,Raphaël Guérois,Lu Sun,Chao Lü,Andrea Califano,Alberto Ciccia
摘要
Summary
Genomic instability can trigger cancer-intrinsic innate immune responses that promote tumor rejection. However, cancer cells often evade these responses by overexpressing immune checkpoint regulators, such as PD-L1. Here, we identify the SNF2-family DNA translocase SMARCAL1 as a factor that favors tumor immune evasion by a dual mechanism involving both the suppression of innate immune signaling and the induction of PD-L1-mediated immune checkpoint responses. Mechanistically, SMARCAL1 limits endogenous DNA damage, thereby suppressing cGAS-STING-dependent signaling during cancer cell growth. Simultaneously, it cooperates with the AP-1 family member JUN to maintain chromatin accessibility at a PD-L1 transcriptional regulatory element, thereby promoting PD-L1 expression in cancer cells. SMARCAL1 loss hinders the ability of tumor cells to induce PD-L1 in response to genomic instability, enhances anti-tumor immune responses and sensitizes tumors to immune checkpoint blockade in a mouse melanoma model. Collectively, these studies uncover SMARCAL1 as a promising target for cancer immunotherapy.