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ULK1 inhibition overcomes compromised antigen presentation and restores antitumor immunity in LKB1 mutant lung cancer

Authors :
Aristotelis Tsirigos
Subhadip Mukhopadhyay
Ting Chen
Mark R. Philips
Jiehui Deng
Hailin Ding
Val Pyon
Ian M. Ahearn
Fei Li
Mirna Bulatović
Antonio Marzio
Justin F. Gainor
Shuai Li
Cassandra Thakurdin
Heather Silver
Peter S. Hammerman
David H. Peng
Eli Rothenberg
John V. Heymach
Michele Pagano
Vajira K. Weerasekara
Yuanwang Pan
Hai Hu
Nathanael S. Gray
Charles M. Perou
Aatish Thennavan
Thales Papagiannakopoulos
Han Han
Baishan Jiang
John T. Poirier
Eleni Papadopoulos
Igor Dolgalev
Kwok-Kin Wong
Gordon J. Freeman
Charles M. Rudin
Nabeel Bardeesy
Eric S. Wang
Jie Li
Source :
Nature cancer
Publication Year :
2021

Abstract

Inactivating mutations in LKB1/STK11 are present in roughly 20% of nonsmall cell lung cancers (NSCLC) and portend poor response to anti-PD-1 immunotherapy. Unexpectedly, we found that LKB1 deficiency correlated with elevated tumor mutational burden (TMB) in NSCLCs from nonsmokers and genetically engineered mouse models, despite the frequent association between high-TMB and anti-PD-1 treatment efficacy. However, LKB1 deficiency also suppressed antigen processing and presentation, which are associated with compromised immunoproteasome activity and increased autophagic flux. Immunoproteasome activity and antigen presentation were restored by inhibiting autophagy through targeting the ATG1/ULK1 pathway. Accordingly, ULK1 inhibition synergized with PD-1 antibody blockade, provoking effector T-cell expansion and tumor regression in Lkb1-mutant tumor models. This study reveals an interplay between the immunoproteasome and autophagic catabolism in antigen processing and immune recognition, and proposes the therapeutic potential of dual ULK1 and PD-1 inhibition in LKB1-mutant NSCLC as a strategy to enhance antigen presentation and to promote antitumor immunity. Wong and colleagues show that LKB1-deficient lung tumors are sensitive to autophagy inhibition, which can restore impaired antigen presentation and antitumor immune responses, and propose dual targeting of ULK1 and PD-1 for these tumors.

Details

ISSN :
26621347
Volume :
2
Issue :
5
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Nature cancer
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....aafbf6fd4e394c7de9b24b44901bf672