4.8 Article

Epigenetic reprogramming of tumor cell-intrinsic STING function sculpts antigenicity and T cell recognition of melanoma

出版社

NATL ACAD SCIENCES
DOI: 10.1073/pnas.2013598118

关键词

STING signaling; epigenetic silencing; DNA methylation; antigenicity; immune evasion

资金

  1. Moffitt Cancer Center Flow Cytometry and Molecular Genomics Core Facilities by the NCI [P30-CA076292]
  2. NCI-NIH [1R01 CA148995, 1R01 CA184845, P30 CA076292, P50 CA168536]
  3. Cindy and Jon Gruden Fund
  4. Chris Sullivan Fund
  5. V Foundation
  6. Dr. Miriam and Sheldon G. Adelson Medical Research Foundation

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The lack or loss of tumor antigenicity is a key mechanism of immune evasion and resistance to T cell-based immunotherapies. Epigenetic regulation, specifically DNA methylation, plays a role in suppressing the STING signaling function in melanoma cells, but this suppression can be reversed through pharmacologic DNA methylation inhibition. Restoring STING signaling improves melanoma cell antigenicity and enhances recognition and killing by cytotoxic T cells, highlighting the functional significance of epigenetic processes in tumor-immune evasion.
Lack or loss of tumor antigenicity represents one of the key mechanisms of immune escape and resistance to T cell-based immunotherapies. Evidence suggests that activation of stimulator of interferon genes (STING) signaling in tumor cells can augment their antigenicity by triggering a type I IFN-mediated sequence of autocrine and paracrine events. Although suppression of this pathway in melanoma and other tumor types has been consistently reported, the mechanistic basis remains unclear. In this study, we asked whether this suppression is, in part, epigenetically regulated and whether it is indeed a driver of melanoma resistance to T cell-based immunotherapies. Using genome-wide DNA methylation profiling, we show that promoter hypermethylation of cGAS and STING genes mediates their coordinated transcriptional silencing and contributes to the widespread impairment of the STING signaling function in clinically-relevant human melanomas and melanoma cell lines. This suppression is reversible through pharmacologic inhibition of DNA methylation, which can reinstate functional STING signaling in at least half of the examined cell lines. Using a series of T cell recognition assays with HLA-matched human melanoma tumor-infiltrating lymphocytes (TIL), we further show that demethylation-mediated restoration of STING signaling in STING-defective melanoma cell lines can improve their antigenicity through the up-regulation of MHC class I molecules and thereby enhance their recognition and killing by cytotoxic T cells. These findings not only elucidate the contribution of epigenetic processes and specifically DNA methylation in melanoma-intrinsic STING signaling impairment but also highlight their functional significance in mediating tumor-immune evasion and resistance to T cell-based immunotherapies.

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