Atractylenolide I enhances responsiveness to immune checkpoint blockade therapy by activating tumor antigen presentation

Hanchen Xu(Laboratory of Molecular Genetics), Kevin Van der Jeught(Laboratory of Molecular Genetics), Zhuolong Zhou(Laboratory of Molecular Genetics), Lu Zhang(Laboratory of Molecular Genetics), Tao Yu(Laboratory of Molecular Genetics), Yifan Sun(Laboratory of Molecular Genetics), Yujing Li(Laboratory of Molecular Genetics), Changlin Wan(Institute of Bioinformatics), Ka Man So(Institute of Bioinformatics), Degang Liu, Michael Frieden(Laboratory of Molecular Genetics), Yuanzhang Fang(Laboratory of Molecular Genetics), Amber L. Mosley(Indiana University School of Medicine), Xiaoming He(University of Maryland, Baltimore), Xinna Zhang(Laboratory of Molecular Genetics), George E. Sandusky(Indiana University School of Medicine), Yunlong Liu(Laboratory of Molecular Genetics), Samy O. Meroueh, Chi Zhang(Laboratory of Molecular Genetics), Aruna Wijeratne(Indiana University School of Medicine), Cheng Huang(Shanghai University of Traditional Chinese Medicine), Guang Ji(Shanghai University of Traditional Chinese Medicine), Xiongbin Lu(Laboratory of Molecular Genetics)
Journal of Clinical Investigation
April 8, 2021
Cited by 155Open Access
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Abstract

One of the primary mechanisms of tumor cell immune evasion is the loss of antigenicity, which arises due to lack of immunogenic tumor antigens as well as dysregulation of the antigen processing machinery. In a screen for small-molecule compounds from herbal medicine that potentiate T cell-mediated cytotoxicity, we identified atractylenolide I (ATT-I), which substantially promotes tumor antigen presentation of both human and mouse colorectal cancer (CRC) cells and thereby enhances the cytotoxic response of CD8+ T cells. Cellular thermal shift assay (CETSA) with multiplexed quantitative mass spectrometry identified the proteasome 26S subunit non-ATPase 4 (PSMD4), an essential component of the immunoproteasome complex, as a primary target protein of ATT-I. Binding of ATT-I with PSMD4 augments the antigen-processing activity of immunoproteasome, leading to enhanced MHC-I-mediated antigen presentation on cancer cells. In syngeneic mouse CRC models and human patient-derived CRC organoid models, ATT-I treatment promotes the cytotoxicity of CD8+ T cells and thus profoundly enhances the efficacy of immune checkpoint blockade therapy. Collectively, we show here that targeting the function of immunoproteasome with ATT-I promotes tumor antigen presentation and empowers T cell cytotoxicity, thus elevating the tumor response to immunotherapy.


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