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A neuropilin-1 antagonist exerts antitumor immunity by inhibiting the suppressive function of intratumoral regulatory T cellsoa mark
  • Jung, Keunok ;
  • Kim, Jeong Ah ;
  • Kim, Ye Jin ;
  • Lee, Hyun Woo ;
  • Kim, Chul Ho ;
  • Haam, Seokjin ;
  • Kim, Yong Sung
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Publication Year
2020-01-01
Publisher
American Association for Cancer Research Inc.
Citation
Cancer Immunology Research, Vol.8, pp.46-56
Mesh Keyword
AnimalsCD8-Positive T-LymphocytesCell Line, TumorColonic NeoplasmsFemaleImmunoglobulin Fc FragmentsImmunosuppressionMelanomaMiceMice, Inbred BALB CMice, Inbred C57BLMice, NudeNeoplasms, ExperimentalNeuropilin-1Peptide FragmentsSkin NeoplasmsT-Lymphocytes, Regulatory
All Science Classification Codes (ASJC)
ImmunologyCancer Research
Abstract
Regulatory T cells (Treg) are targeted for cancer immunotherapy because they suppress antitumor immunity. Although the importance of neuropilin-1 (NRP1) in the stability and function of intratumoral Tregs is well-documented, targeting of NRP1þ Tregs for anticancer immunotherapy has not been well explored. Here, we found that an NRP1 antagonist [Fc(AAG)-TPP11], generated by fusion of the NRP1-specific binding peptide TPP11 with the C-terminus of an effector function–deficient immunoglobulin Fc(AAG) variant, inhibits intratumoral NRP1þ Treg function and stability. Fc(AAG)-TPP11 triggered the internalization of NRP1, reducing its surface expression on Tregs and thereby inhibiting the suppressive function of Tregs. In two murine syngeneic tumor models, Fc(AAG)-TPP11 retarded tumor growth, comparable with a Treg-depleting anti–CTLA-4 antibody, without noticeable toxicity. Fc(AAG)-TPP11 inhibited NRP1-dependent Treg function, inducing unstable intratumoral Tregs, with reduced expression of Foxp3 and enhanced production of IFNγ, which subsequently increased the functionality and frequency of intratumoral CD8þ T cells. We also observed selective expression of NRP1 on Tregs isolated from human tumors, but not from the blood of healthy donors and patients with cancer, as well as ex vivo inhibition of intratumoral NRP1þ Treg function by Fc(AAG)-TPP11. Our results suggest that the NRP1 antagonist Fc(AAG)-TPP11 has therapeutic potential for the inhibition of intratumoral NRP1þ Tregs with limited unfavorable effects on peripheral Tregs.
Language
eng
URI
https://dspace.ajou.ac.kr/dev/handle/2018.oak/31092
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1158/2326-6066.cir-19-0143
Fulltext

Type
Article
Funding
This work was supported by National Research Foundation grants (2016R1A2A2A05005108 and 2014M3C1A3051470; to Y.-S. Kim), funded by the Ministry of Science, ICT and Future Planning, and the Korea Health Technology R&D Project (HI16C0992), funded by the Korea Health Industry Development Institute, Republic of Korea.
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Kim, Yong Sung김용성
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