Overcoming resistance to immune checkpoint therapy in PTEN-null prostate cancer by intermittent anti-PI3Kα/β/δ treatment.

Nat Commun

The MOE Key Laboratory of Cell Proliferation and Differentiation, School of Life Sciences, Peking University, Beijing, China.

Published: January 2022

AI Article Synopsis

  • Combining immune checkpoint therapy (ICT) with PI3K inhibitors can enhance anti-cancer treatments, but challenges exist due to how PI3K affects both cancer and immune cells.
  • Researchers discovered that intermittent dosing of the PI3K inhibitor BAY1082439 in Pten-null prostate cancer models helps overcome resistance to ICT by activating immune responses.
  • BAY1082439 shifts immune suppression in cancer cells to stimulation, enhancing T cell activity and making tumors more responsive to anti-PD-1 therapy, ultimately leading to better and longer-lasting treatment outcomes.

Article Abstract

Combining immune checkpoint therapy (ICT) and targeted therapy holds great promises for broad and long-lasting anti-cancer therapies. However, combining ICT with anti-PI3K inhibitors have been challenging because the multifaceted effects of PI3K on both cancer cells and immune cells within the tumor microenvironment. Here we find that intermittent but not daily dosing of a PI3Kα/β/δ inhibitor, BAY1082439, on Pten-null prostate cancer models could overcome ICT resistance and unleash CD8 T cell-dependent anti-tumor immunity in vivo. Mechanistically, BAY1082439 converts cancer cell-intrinsic immune-suppression to immune-stimulation by promoting IFNα/IFNγ pathway activation, β2-microglubin expression and CXCL10/CCL5 secretion. With its preferential regulatory T cell inhibition activity, BAY1082439 promotes clonal expansion of tumor-associated CD8 T cells, most likely via tertiary lymphoid structures. Once primed, tumors remain T cell-inflamed, become responsive to anti-PD-1 therapy and have durable therapeutic effect. Our data suggest that intermittent PI3K inhibition can alleviate Pten-null cancer cell-intrinsic immunosuppressive activity and turn "cold" tumors into T cell-inflamed ones, paving the way for successful ICT.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8748754PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1038/s41467-021-27833-0DOI Listing

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