INFORMATION:
In addition to Ajina and Weiner, authors of the manuscript at Georgetown include Zoe X. Malchiodi, Allison A. Fitzgerald, Annie Zuo, Shangzi Wang, Maha Moussa, Marta Catalfamo and Sandra A. Jablonski. Other authors include Connor J. Cooper, Jeremy C. Smith, and Yue Shen, University of Tennessee; Quentin R. Johnson and Jerry M. Parks, Oak Ridge National Laboratory; and Elana J. Fertig, Johns Hopkins University, Baltimore, Maryland.
This research was supported by NCI grant R01 CA50633 (LMW) and (NCI) grant P30-CA051008 (LMW). Lombardi Comprehensive Cancer Center Shared Resources supporting this study included: The Genomics & Epigenomics Shared Resource, the Flow Cytometry & Cell Sorting Shared Resource, the Tissue Culture Shared Resource, Proteomics & Metabolomics Shared Resource, Biostatistics & Bioinformatics Shared Resource, and Histopathology & Tissue Shared Resource. RA was supported by King Saud bin Abdulaziz University for Health Science (KSAU-HS) and the Saudi Arabian Cultural Mission (SACM). This research was sponsored by the Laboratory Directed Research and Development Program at Oak Ridge National Laboratory (ORNL), which is managed by UT-Battelle, LLC, for the U.S. Department of Energy (DOE) under contract DE-AC05-00OR22725. C.J.C. was supported by NIH/NIGMS- IMSD grant R25GM086761 (JMP). This research was supported by the Lustgarten Foundation, the Emerson Foundation (640183) and the Allegheny Foundation (EJF). This research was supported by Leidos Biomedical Research, Inc., and has been funded in whole or in part with federal funds from the National Cancer Institute, NIH, under contract HHSN261200800001E (MC and MM) and R01AI145549-02 (MC).
About Georgetown Lombardi Comprehensive Cancer Center
Georgetown Lombardi Comprehensive Cancer Center is designated by the National Cancer Institute (NCI) as a comprehensive cancer center. A part of Georgetown University Medical Center, Georgetown Lombardi is the only comprehensive cancer center in the Washington D.C. area. It serves as the research engine for MedStar Health, Georgetown University's clinical partner. Georgetown Lombardi is also an NCI recognized consortium with John Theurer Cancer Center/Hackensack Meridian Health in Bergen County, New Jersey. The consortium reflects an integrated cancer research enterprise with scientists and physician-researchers from both locations. Georgetown Lombardi seeks to improve the diagnosis, treatment, and prevention of cancer through innovative basic, translational and clinical research, patient care, community education and outreach to service communities throughout the Washington region, while its consortium member John Theurer Cancer Center/Hackensack Meridian Health serves communities in northern New Jersey. Georgetown Lombardi is a member of the NCI Community Oncology Research Program (UG1CA239758). Georgetown Lombardi is supported in part by a National Cancer Institute Cancer Center Support Grant (P30CA051008). Connect with Georgetown Lombardi on Facebook (Facebook.com/Georgetown Lombardi) and Twitter (@LombardiCancer).
Mechanism for how pancreatic cancer evades immunotherapy elucidated
2021-01-28
(Press-News.org) WASHINGTON --- Pancreatic cancer, one of the most lethal of all cancers, is capable of evading attacks by immune cells by changing its microenvironment so that the immune cells suppress, rather than support, an attack on the tumor. The scientists also found that that some of the mediators of this suppressive response, including a protein called STAT1, represent potential therapeutic targets that could be used to reverse this evasion and point to possible treatment opportunities.
The finding appears January 28, 2021, in Cancer Immunology Research.
"This is the first demonstration that an immune attack induces pancreatic cancer-derived immune suppression, offering a new approach to immunotherapy for this deadly cancer," noted Louis M. Weiner, M.D., director of Georgetown Lombardi and the Principal Investigator of this study.
Pancreatic ductal adenocarcinoma (PDAC) comprises over 90 percent of all pancreatic cancers, with nearly 60,000 diagnoses expected in the U.S. in 2021. Only 10 percent of those diagnosed will live five years or more, primarily because the cancer is highly resistant to many types of treatments. Despite major recent advances in cancer immunotherapy, this cancer rarely responds to such treatment approaches which have revolutionized the management of other cancers, such as melanoma and lung cancer.
One reason for this treatment resistance is the tumor microenvironment of PDAC, which actively suppresses immune responses that are helpful in attacking cancer cells. Reham Ajina, PhD, a recent graduate of the Georgetown University Medical Center's Tumor Biology Program, studied mice to explore how the immune cell that is most responsible for recognizing and killing cancer cells, the T cell, is able to elicit an anti-tumor T-cell response in many cancers, but not in most pancreatic cancers.
"Tumor tissue is comprised of not only cancer cells, but also a wide range of non-cancerous elements, such as immune, fat, and neuronal cells, along with fibers and blood vessels that comprise the tumor microenvironment," said Ajina. "Normally, T cells recognize and kill cancer cells, but it appears that malignant pancreatic cells are simultaneously trying to find ways to evade a T cell immune attack by influencing components of the tumor microenvironment to favor cancer development and growth, a process called remodeling. Inhibiting this remodeling is a major challenge in trying to treat pancreatic cancer."
One of the keys to being able to visualize this remodeling in mice was made possible by cutting-edge analytical technologies contributed by collaborators at Johns Hopkins University and the Oak Ridge National Laboratory.
Beyond the finding of remodeling and evasion, the research team was able to determine that one of the mediators of this suppressive response included an activated protein called signal transducer and activator of transcription 1 (STAT1). The researchers hypothesized that STAT1-based signaling could be targeted to reverse this resistance mechanism. The investigators chose an FDA-approved drug, ruxolitinib, that is known to target a STAT signaling pathway, to test in mice. Indeed, use of the drug overcame tumor-protective remodeling responses and helped improve the response to immunotherapy.
"Fludarabine is another FDA-approved drug that targets STAT1 signaling, and there are several other similar-acting drugs that are currently under development. It would be worth testing the therapeutic benefit of these drugs in future studies to evaluate and corroborate our observation," said Ajina. "Also, our pre-clinical study in mice suggests that the combination of ruxolitinib and other approved immunotherapies could improve pancreatic cancer patients' outcomes. This approach to treating an aggressive cancer is promising and we hope that it can be tested in clinical trials in the not-too-distant future."
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