STING activation reprograms tumor vasculatures and synergizes with VEGFR2 blockade

Hannah Yang(CHA University Bundang Medical Center), Won Suk Lee(CHA University Bundang Medical Center), So Jung Kong(CHA University Bundang Medical Center), Chang Gon Kim(Korea Advanced Institute of Science and Technology), Joo Hoon Kim(CHA University Bundang Medical Center), Sei Kyung Chang, Sewha Kim(CHA University Bundang Medical Center), Gwangil Kim(CHA University Bundang Medical Center), Hong Jae Chon(CHA University Bundang Medical Center), Chan Kim(Korea Advanced Institute of Science and Technology)
Journal of Clinical Investigation
July 25, 2019
Cited by 304Open Access
Full Text

Abstract

The stimulator of interferon genes (STING) signaling pathway is a critical link between innate and adaptive immunity, and induces anti-tumor immune responses. STING is expressed in vasculatures, but its role in tumor angiogenesis has not been elucidated. Here we investigated STING-induced tumor vascular remodeling and the potential of STING-based combination immunotherapy. Endothelial STING expression was correlated with enhanced T-cell infiltration and prolonged survival in human colon and breast cancer. Intratumoral STING activation with STING agonists (cGAMP or RR-CDA) normalized tumor vasculatures in implanted and spontaneous cancers, but not in STING-deficient mice. These were mediated by upregulation of type I/II interferon genes and vascular stabilizing genes (e.g., Angpt1, Pdgfrb, and Col4a). STING in non-hematopoietic cells is as important as STING in hematopoietic cells to induce a maximal therapeutic efficacy of exogenous STING agonist. Vascular normalizing effects of STING agonists were dependent on type I interferon signaling and CD8+ T cells. Notably, STING-based immunotherapy was maximally effective when combined with VEGFR2 blockade and/or immune checkpoint blockade (αPD-1 or αCTLA-4), leading to complete regression of immunotherapy-resistant tumors. Our data show that intratumoral STING activation can normalize tumor vasculature and the tumor microenvironment, providing a rationale for combining STING-based immunotherapy and anti-angiogenic therapy.


Related Papers

No related papers found

Powered by citation graph analysis