AI Article Synopsis

  • Tumours evade immune responses, making cancer immunotherapies less effective, mainly through loss of antigen presentation and cytokine signaling pathways.
  • A genome-wide CRISPR/Cas9 screen identified that loss of core-binding factor subunit beta (CBFβ) increases tumour resistance to CAR-T cells, which do not rely on traditional antigen presentation.
  • The study found that intracellular zinc levels influence tumour cell susceptibility to T cell killing, suggesting that targeting zinc could enhance the effectiveness of cancer therapies in overcoming immune evasion.

Article Abstract

Tumour immune evasion presents a significant challenge to the effectiveness of cancer immunotherapies. Recent advances in high-throughput screening techniques have uncovered that loss of antigen presentation and cytokine signalling pathways are central mechanisms by which tumours evade T cell immunity. To uncover additional vulnerabilities in tumour cells beyond the well-recognized antigen presentation pathway, we conducted a genome-wide CRISPR/Cas9 screen to identify genes that mediate resistance to chimeric-antigen receptor (CAR)-T cells, which function independently of classical antigen presentation. Our study revealed that loss of core-binding factor subunit beta (CBFβ) enhances tumour cell resistance to T cell killing, mediated through T cell-derived TNF. Mechanistically, RNA-sequencing and elemental analyses revealed that deletion of CBFβ disrupts numerous pathways including those involved in zinc homoeostasis. Moreover, we demonstrated that modulation of cellular zinc, achieved by supplementation or chelation, significantly altered tumour cell susceptibility to TNF by regulating the levels of inhibitor of apoptosis proteins. Consistent with this, treatment of tumour cells with a membrane-permeable zinc chelator had no impact on tumour cell viability alone, but significantly increased tumour cell lysis by CD8+ T cells in a TNF-dependent but perforin-independent manner. These results underscore the crucial role of intracellular zinc in regulating tumour cell susceptibility to T cell-mediated killing, revealing a novel vulnerability in tumour cells that might be exploited for the development of future cancer immunotherapeutics.

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http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC11618339PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1038/s41418-024-01369-4DOI Listing

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