Microparticles from tumors exposed to radiation promote immune evasion in part by PD-L1

暴露于辐射的肿瘤产生的微粒部分通过PD-L1促进免疫逃逸。

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作者:Michael Timaner # ,Ruslana Kotsofruk # ,Ziv Raviv ,Ksenia Magidey ,Dvir Shechter ,Tal Kan ,Alexander Nevelsky ,Shahar Daniel ,Elisabeth G E de Vries ,Tongwu Zhang ,Orit Kaidar-Person ,Robert S Kerbel ,Yuval Shaked

Abstract

Radiotherapy induces immune-related responses in cancer patients by various mechanisms. Here, we investigate the immunomodulatory role of tumor-derived microparticles (TMPs)-extracellular vesicles shed from tumor cells-following radiotherapy. We demonstrate that breast carcinoma cells exposed to radiation shed TMPs containing elevated levels of immune-modulating proteins, one of which is programmed death-ligand 1 (PD-L1). These TMPs inhibit cytotoxic T lymphocyte (CTL) activity both in vitro and in vivo, and thus promote tumor growth. Evidently, adoptive transfer of CTLs pre-cultured with TMPs from irradiated breast carcinoma cells increases tumor growth rates in mice recipients in comparison with control mice receiving CTLs pre-cultured with TMPs from untreated tumor cells. In addition, blocking the PD-1-PD-L1 axis, either genetically or pharmacologically, partially alleviates TMP-mediated inhibition of CTL activity, suggesting that the immunomodulatory effects of TMPs in response to radiotherapy is mediated, in part, by PD-L1. Overall, our findings provide mechanistic insights into the tumor immune surveillance state in response to radiotherapy and suggest a therapeutic synergy between radiotherapy and immune checkpoint inhibitors.

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