作者
Patricia Ho,Johannes C. Melms,Meri Rogava,Chris J. Frangieh,Joanna Poźniak,Shivem B. Shah,Zachary Walsh,Oleksandr Kyrysyuk,Amit Dipak Amin,Lindsay Caprio,Benjamin T. Fullerton,Rajesh K. Soni,Casey R. Ager,Jana Biermann,Yi‐Ping Wang,Mohsen Khosravi‐Maharlooei,Giorgia Zanetti,Michael Mu,Hijab Fatima,Emily K. Moore,Neil Vasan,Samuel F. Bakhoum,Steven L. Reiner,Chantale Bernatchez,Megan Sykes,Emily M. Mace,Kai W. Wucherpfennig,Dirk Schadendorf,Oliver Bechter,Parin Shah,Gary K. Schwartz,Jean‐Christophe Marine,Benjamin Izar
摘要
Summary
The cell-autonomous balance of immune-inhibitory and -stimulatory signals is a critical process in cancer immune evasion. Using patient-derived co-cultures, humanized mouse models, and single-cell RNA-sequencing of patient melanomas biopsied before and on immune checkpoint blockade, we find that intact cancer cell-intrinsic expression of CD58 and ligation to CD2 is required for anti-tumor immunity and is predictive of treatment response. Defects in this axis promote immune evasion through diminished T cell activation, impaired intratumoral T cell infiltration and proliferation, and concurrently increased PD-L1 protein stabilization. Through CRISPR-Cas9 and proteomics screens, we identify and validate CMTM6 as critical for CD58 stability and upregulation of PD-L1 upon CD58 loss. Competition between CD58 and PD-L1 for CMTM6 binding determines their rate of endosomal recycling over lysosomal degradation. Overall, we describe an underappreciated yet critical axis of cancer immunity and provide a molecular basis for how cancer cells balance immune inhibitory and stimulatory cues.