Contribution of NK cells to immunotherapy mediated by PD-1/PD-L1 blockade

Joy Hsu(University of California, Berkeley), Jonathan J. Hodgins(University of Ottawa), Malvika Marathe(University of California, Berkeley), Chris J. Nicolai(University of California, Berkeley), Marie‐Claude Bourgeois‐Daigneault(University of Ottawa), Troy N. Trevino(University of California, Berkeley), Camillia S. Azimi(University of California, Berkeley), Amit Scheer(University of Ottawa), Haley E. Randolph(University of California, Berkeley), Thornton W. Thompson(University of California, Berkeley), Lily Zhang(University of California, Berkeley), Alexandre Iannello(University of California, Berkeley), Nikhita Mathur(University of Ottawa), Karen Jardine(University of Ottawa), Georgia Kirn(University of California, Berkeley), John C. Bell(University of Ottawa), Michael W. McBurney(University of Ottawa), David H. Raulet(University of California, Berkeley), Michele Ardolino(University of Ottawa)
Journal of Clinical Investigation
September 9, 2018
Cited by 821Open Access
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Abstract

Checkpoint blockade immunotherapy targeting the PD-1/PD-L1 inhibitory axis has produced remarkable results in the treatment of several types of cancer. Whereas cytotoxic T cells are known to provide important antitumor effects during checkpoint blockade, certain cancers with low MHC expression are responsive to therapy, suggesting that other immune cell types may also play a role. Here, we employed several mouse models of cancer to investigate the effect of PD-1/PD-L1 blockade on NK cells, a population of cytotoxic innate lymphocytes that also mediate antitumor immunity. We discovered that PD-1 and PD-L1 blockade elicited a strong NK cell response that was indispensable for the full therapeutic effect of immunotherapy. PD-1 was expressed on NK cells within transplantable, spontaneous, and genetically induced mouse tumor models, and PD-L1 expression in cancer cells resulted in reduced NK cell responses and generation of more aggressive tumors in vivo. PD-1 expression was more abundant on NK cells with an activated and more responsive phenotype and did not mark NK cells with an exhausted phenotype. These results demonstrate the importance of the PD-1/PD-L1 axis in inhibiting NK cell responses in vivo and reveal that NK cells, in addition to T cells, mediate the effect of PD-1/PD-L1 blockade immunotherapy.


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