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Intestinal toxicity to CTLA-4 blockade driven by IL-6 and myeloid infiltration

Authors :
Yifan Zhou
Yusra B. Medik
Bhakti Patel
Daniel B. Zamler
Sijie Chen
Thomas Chapman
Sarah Schneider
Elizabeth M. Park
Rachel L. Babcock
Taylor T. Chrisikos
Laura M. Kahn
Allison M. Dyevoich
Josue E. Pineda
Matthew C. Wong
Aditya K. Mishra
Samuel H. Cass
Alexandria P. Cogdill
Daniel H. Johnson
Sarah B. Johnson
Khalida Wani
Debora A. Ledesma
Courtney W. Hudgens
Jingjing Wang
Md Abdul Wadud Khan
Christine B. Peterson
Aron Y. Joon
Weiyi Peng
Haiyan S. Li
Reetakshi Arora
Ximing Tang
Maria Gabriela Raso
Xuegong Zhang
Wai Chin Foo
Michael T. Tetzlaff
Gretchen E. Diehl
Karen Clise-Dwyer
Elizabeth M. Whitley
Matthew M. Gubin
James P. Allison
Patrick Hwu
Nadim J. Ajami
Adi Diab
Jennifer A. Wargo
Stephanie S. Watowich
Source :
The Journal of experimental medicine. 220(2)
Publication Year :
2022

Abstract

Immune checkpoint blockade (ICB) has revolutionized cancer treatment, yet quality of life and continuation of therapy can be constrained by immune-related adverse events (irAEs). Limited understanding of irAE mechanisms hampers development of approaches to mitigate their damage. To address this, we examined whether mice gained sensitivity to anti-CTLA-4 (αCTLA-4)–mediated toxicity upon disruption of gut homeostatic immunity. We found αCTLA-4 drove increased inflammation and colonic tissue damage in mice with genetic predisposition to intestinal inflammation, acute gastrointestinal infection, transplantation with a dysbiotic fecal microbiome, or dextran sodium sulfate administration. We identified an immune signature of αCTLA-4–mediated irAEs, including colonic neutrophil accumulation and systemic interleukin-6 (IL-6) release. IL-6 blockade combined with antibiotic treatment reduced intestinal damage and improved αCTLA-4 therapeutic efficacy in inflammation-prone mice. Intestinal immune signatures were validated in biopsies from patients with ICB colitis. Our work provides new preclinical models of αCTLA-4 intestinal irAEs, mechanistic insights into irAE development, and potential approaches to enhance ICB efficacy while mitigating irAEs.

Details

ISSN :
15409538
Volume :
220
Issue :
2
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
The Journal of experimental medicine
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....dd3f2ab36b1e8f26732341aaaebcd8d1