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Interrupting the nitrosative stress fuels tumor-specific cytotoxic T lymphocytes in pancreatic cancer

Authors :
Francesco De Sanctis
Alessia Lamolinara
Federico Boschi
Chiara Musiu
Simone Caligola
Rosalinda Trovato
Alessandra Fiore
Cristina Frusteri
Cristina Anselmi
Ornella Poffe
Tiziana Cestari
Stefania Canè
Silvia Sartoris
Rosalba Giugno
Giulia Del Rosario
Barbara Zappacosta
Francesco Del Pizzo
Matteo Fassan
Erica Dugnani
Lorenzo Piemonti
Emanuela Bottani
Ilaria Decimo
Salvatore Paiella
Roberto Salvia
Rita Teresa Lawlor
Vincenzo Corbo
Youngkyu Park
David A Tuveson
Claudio Bassi
Aldo Scarpa
Manuela Iezzi
Stefano Ugel
Vincenzo Bronte
De Sanctis, Francesco
Lamolinara, Alessia
Boschi, Federico
Musiu, Chiara
Caligola, Simone
Trovato, Rosalinda
Fiore, Alessandra
Frusteri, Cristina
Anselmi, Cristina
Poffe, Ornella
Cestari, Tiziana
Canè, Stefania
Sartoris, Silvia
Giugno, Rosalba
Del Rosario, Giulia
Zappacosta, Barbara
Del Pizzo, Francesco
Fassan, Matteo
Dugnani, Erica
Piemonti, Lorenzo
Bottani, Emanuela
Decimo, Ilaria
Paiella, Salvatore
Salvia, Roberto
Lawlor, Rita Teresa
Corbo, Vincenzo
Park, Youngkyu
Tuveson, David A
Bassi, Claudio
Scarpa, Aldo
Iezzi, Manuela
Ugel, Stefano
Bronte, Vincenzo
Source :
Journal for Immunotherapy of Cancer, Journal for ImmunoTherapy of Cancer, Vol 10, Iss 1 (2022)
Publication Year :
2022
Publisher :
BMJ Publishing Group, 2022.

Abstract

BackgroundPancreatic ductal adenocarcinoma (PDAC) is one of the deadliest tumors owing to its robust desmoplasia, low immunogenicity, and recruitment of cancer-conditioned, immunoregulatory myeloid cells. These features strongly limit the success of immunotherapy as a single agent, thereby suggesting the need for the development of a multitargeted approach. The goal is to foster T lymphocyte infiltration within the tumor landscape and neutralize cancer-triggered immune suppression, to enhance the therapeutic effectiveness of immune-based treatments, such as anticancer adoptive cell therapy (ACT).MethodsWe examined the contribution of immunosuppressive myeloid cells expressing arginase 1 and nitric oxide synthase 2 in building up a reactive nitrogen species (RNS)-dependent chemical barrier and shaping the PDAC immune landscape. We examined the impact of pharmacological RNS interference on overcoming the recruitment and immunosuppressive activity of tumor-expanded myeloid cells, which render pancreatic cancers resistant to immunotherapy.ResultsPDAC progression is marked by a stepwise infiltration of myeloid cells, which enforces a highly immunosuppressive microenvironment through the uncontrolled metabolism of L-arginine by arginase 1 and inducible nitric oxide synthase activity, resulting in the production of large amounts of reactive oxygen and nitrogen species. The extensive accumulation of myeloid suppressing cells and nitrated tyrosines (nitrotyrosine, N-Ty) establishes an RNS-dependent chemical barrier that impairs tumor infiltration by T lymphocytes and restricts the efficacy of adoptive immunotherapy. A pharmacological treatment with AT38 ([3-(aminocarbonyl)furoxan-4-yl]methyl salicylate) reprograms the tumor microenvironment from protumoral to antitumoral, which supports T lymphocyte entrance within the tumor core and aids the efficacy of ACT with telomerase-specific cytotoxic T lymphocytes.ConclusionsTumor microenvironment reprogramming by ablating aberrant RNS production bypasses the current limits of immunotherapy in PDAC by overcoming immune resistance.

Details

Language :
English
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Journal for Immunotherapy of Cancer, Journal for ImmunoTherapy of Cancer, Vol 10, Iss 1 (2022)
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....661325dd16670be67fc4f48b109f0734