Abstract
Pancreatic ductal adenocarcinoma (PDAC) is a highly aggressive cancer characterized by activating KRAS mutations and TP53 alterations. TP53 missense mutations lose their wild-type tumor-suppressor function. Here, we studied whether p53 missense mutations have potential gain-of-function oncogenic roles and their impact on cancer-cell-intrinsic gene expression and the tumor immune microenvironment (TME) in PDAC. p53R172H established an immunosuppressive TME and impaired the efficacy of immune checkpoint inhibitors (ICIs) by regulating a distinct set of chemokines. Among these, tumor-specific reduction of Cxcl1, which encodes a chemoattractant for neutrophils, promoted T cell infiltration and decreased tumor growth. Mechanistically, p53R172H occupied the distal enhancers of Cxcl1 and amplified its expression. These enhancers were responsible for Cxcl1 expression and were essential for its immunosuppressive function. Nuclear factor κB (NF-κB) was a critical cofactor required for p53R172H occupancy at these enhancers. Thus, a common mutation in a tumor-suppressor transcription factor appropriates enhancers, thereby stimulating chemokine expression and establishing an immunosuppressive TME that diminishes ICI efficacy in PDAC.
