Molecular and Genetic Characterization of MHC Deficiency Identifies EZH2 as Therapeutic Target for Enhancing Immune Recognition

Daisuke Ennishi(BC Cancer Agency), Katsuyoshi Takata(BC Cancer Agency), Wendy Béguelin(Cornell University), Gerben Duns(BC Cancer Agency), Anja Mottok(Universität Ulm), Pedro Farinha(BC Cancer Agency), Ali Bashashati(Spinal Cord Injury BC), Saeed Saberi(Spinal Cord Injury BC), Merrill Boyle(BC Cancer Agency), Barbara Meissner(BC Cancer Agency), Susana Ben‐Neriah(BC Cancer Agency), Bruce W. Woolcock(BC Cancer Agency), Adèle Telenius(BC Cancer Agency), Daniel Lai(Spinal Cord Injury BC), Matt Teater(Cornell University), Robert Kridel(BC Cancer Agency), Kerry J. Savage(BC Cancer Agency), Laurie H. Sehn(BC Cancer Agency), Ryan D. Morin(Simon Fraser University), Marco A. Marra(Spinal Cord Injury BC), Sohrab P. Shah(Spinal Cord Injury BC), Joseph M. Connors(BC Cancer Agency), Randy D. Gascoyne(BC Cancer Agency), David W. Scott(BC Cancer Agency), Ari Melnick(Cornell University), Christian Steidl(BC Cancer Agency)
Cancer Discovery
January 31, 2019
Cited by 313

Abstract

Abstract We performed a genomic, transcriptomic, and immunophenotypic study of 347 patients with diffuse large B-cell lymphoma (DLBCL) to uncover the molecular basis underlying acquired deficiency of MHC expression. Low MHC-II expression defines tumors originating from the centroblast-rich dark zone of the germinal center (GC) that was associated with inferior prognosis. MHC-II–deficient tumors were characterized by somatically acquired gene mutations reducing MHC-II expression and a lower amount of tumor-infiltrating lymphocytes. In particular, we demonstrated a strong enrichment of EZH2 mutations in both MHC-I– and MHC-II–negative primary lymphomas, and observed reduced MHC expression and T-cell infiltrates in murine lymphoma models expressing mutant Ezh2Y641. Of clinical relevance, EZH2 inhibitors significantly restored MHC expression in EZH2-mutated human DLBCL cell lines. Hence, our findings suggest a tumor progression model of acquired immune escape in GC-derived lymphomas and pave the way for development of complementary therapeutic approaches combining immunotherapy with epigenetic reprogramming. Significance: We demonstrate how MHC-deficient lymphoid tumors evolve in a cell-of-origin–specific context. Specifically, EZH2 mutations were identified as a genetic mechanism underlying acquired MHC deficiency. The paradigmatic restoration of MHC expression by EZH2 inhibitors provides the rationale for synergistic therapies combining immunotherapies with epigenetic reprogramming to enhance tumor recognition and elimination. See related commentary by Velcheti et al., p. 472. This article is highlighted in the In This Issue feature, p. 453


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