作者
Navin R. Mahadevan,Erik H. Knelson,Jacquelyn O. Wolff,Amir Vajdi,Maria Saigí,Marco Campisi,Deli Hong,Tran C. Thai,Brandon Piel,Saemi Han,Bruce B. Reinhold,Jonathan S. Duke‐Cohan,Michael J. Poitras,Luke J. Taus,Patrick H. Lizotte,Andrew Portell,Victor Quadros,Alison Santucci,Takahiko Murayama,Israel Cañadas,Shunsuke Kitajima,Aoi Akitsu,Maya Fridrikh,Hideo Watanabe,Brendan Reardon,Prafulla C. Gokhale,Cloud P. Paweletz,Mark M. Awad,Eliezer M. Van Allen,Ana Lako,Xitao Wang,Benjamin Chen,Fangxin Hong,Lynette M. Sholl,Michael Y. Tolstorukov,Kathleen L. Pfaff,Pasi A. Jänne,Evisa Gjini,Robin Edwards,Scott J. Rodig,Ellis L. Reinherz,Matthew G. Oser,David A. Barbie
摘要
Abstract Small cell lung carcinoma (SCLC) is highly mutated, yet durable response to immune checkpoint blockade (ICB) is rare. SCLC also exhibits cellular plasticity, which could influence its immunobiology. Here we discover that a distinct subset of SCLC uniquely upregulates MHC I, enriching for durable ICB benefit. In vitro modeling confirms epigenetic recovery of MHC I in SCLC following loss of neuroendocrine differentiation, which tracks with derepression of STING. Transient EZH2 inhibition expands these nonneuroendocrine cells, which display intrinsic innate immune signaling and basally restored antigen presentation. Consistent with these findings, murine nonneuroendocrine SCLC tumors are rejected in a syngeneic model, with clonal expansion of immunodominant effector CD8 T cells. Therapeutically, EZH2 inhibition followed by STING agonism enhances T-cell recognition and rejection of SCLC in mice. Together, these data identify MHC I as a novel biomarker of SCLC immune responsiveness and suggest novel immunotherapeutic approaches to co-opt SCLC's intrinsic immunogenicity. Significance: SCLC is poorly immunogenic, displaying modest ICB responsiveness with rare durable activity. In profiling its plasticity, we uncover intrinsically immunogenic MHC Ihi subpopulations of nonneuroendocrine SCLC associated with durable ICB benefit. We also find that combined EZH2 inhibition and STING agonism uncovers this cell state, priming cells for immune rejection. This article is highlighted in the In This Issue feature, p. 1861