Icaritin promotes tumor T‐cell infiltration and induces antitumor immunity in mice

Haibang Hao(Army Medical University), Qi Zhang(Shenwu Technology Group Corp (China)), Hai Zhu(Shenwu Technology Group Corp (China)), Yuxiang Wen(Army Medical University), Ding Qiu(Army Medical University), Jian Xiong(Army Medical University), Xiaolan Fu(Army Medical University), Yuzhang Wu(Army Medical University), Kun Meng(Shenwu Technology Group Corp (China)), Jian Li(Army Medical University)
European Journal of Immunology
August 29, 2019
Cited by 97Open Access
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Abstract

Abstract Icaritin, a hydrolytic product of icariin isolated from traditional Chinese herbal medicine genus Epimedium , has many pharmacological and biological activities. Here, we show that icaritin can effectively decrease tumor burden of murine B16F10 melanoma and MC38 colorectal tumors in a T‐cell dependent manner. The treatment effects are associated with increased CD8 T‐cell infiltration and increased effector memory T‐cell frequency. In vivo depletion of CD8 T cell using an anti‐CD8 monoclonal antibody abolished the antitumor effect, which supports the critical role of CD8 T cells during icaritin treatment. By analyzing immune cells in the tumor tissue, we found reduced frequency of CD11b + Gr1 + myeloid‐derived suppression cells (MDSCs) infiltration and downregulation of PD‐L1 expression on MDSCs after icaritin treatment. This was not limited to MDSCs, as icaritin also decreased the expression of PD‐L1 on neutrophils. Importantly, the combination of anti‐PD‐1/CTLA‐4 and icaritin significantly enhances antitumor ability and increases the efficacy of either treatment alone. Our findings reveal that icaritin induces antitumor immunity in a CD8 T‐cell‐dependent way and justify further investigation of combining immune checkpoint therapy to icaritin‐based antitumor therapy.


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