The CD58:CD2 axis is co-regulated with PD-L1 via CMTM6 and governs anti-tumor immunity

Patricia Ho(Columbia University Irving Medical Center), Johannes C. Melms(Columbia University Irving Medical Center), Meri Rogava(Columbia University Irving Medical Center), Chris J. Frangieh(Broad Institute), Shivem B. Shah(Columbia University Irving Medical Center), Zachary Walsh(Columbia University Irving Medical Center), Oleksandr Kyrysyuk(Dana-Farber Cancer Institute), Amit Dipak Amin(Columbia University Irving Medical Center), Lindsay Caprio(Columbia University Irving Medical Center), Benjamin T. Fullerton(Columbia University Irving Medical Center), Rajesh Soni(Herbert Irving Comprehensive Cancer Center), Casey R. Ager(Columbia University Irving Medical Center), Jana Biermann(Columbia University Irving Medical Center), Yi‐Ping Wang(Columbia University Irving Medical Center), Michael Mu(Columbia University Irving Medical Center), Hijab Fatima(Columbia University), Emily K. Moore(Columbia University Irving Medical Center), Neil Vasan(Columbia University Irving Medical Center), Samuel F. Bakhoum(Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center), Steven L. Reiner(Columbia University), Chantale Bernatchez(The University of Texas MD Anderson Cancer Center), Emily M. Mace(Columbia University), Kai W. Wucherpfennig(Dana-Farber Cancer Institute), Dirk Schadendorf(Essen University Hospital), Gary K. Schwartz(Columbia University Irving Medical Center), Benjamin Izar(Columbia University Irving Medical Center)
bioRxiv (Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory)
March 21, 2022
Cited by 10Open Access
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Abstract

ABSTRACT The cell autonomous balance of immune-inhibitory and -stimulatory signals is a critical yet poorly understood process in cancer immune evasion. Using patient-derived co-culture models and humanized mouse models, we show that an intact CD58:CD2 interaction is necessary for anti-tumor immunity. Defects in this axis lead to multi-faceted immune evasion through impaired CD2-dependent T cell polyfunctionality, T cell exclusion, impaired intra-tumoral proliferation, and concurrent protein stabilization of PD-L1. We performed genome-scale CRISPR-Cas9 and CD58 coimmunoprecipitation mass spectrometry screens identifying CMTM6 as a key stabilizer of CD58, and show that CMTM6 is required for concurrent upregulation of PD-L1 in CD58 loss. Single-cell RNA-seq analysis of patient melanoma samples demonstrates that most TILs lack expression of primary costimulatory signals required for response to PD-1 blockade (e.g. CD28 ), but maintain strong CD2 expression, thus providing an opportunity to mobilize a so far therapeutically untapped pool of TILs for anti-tumor immunity. We identify two potential therapeutic avenues, including rescued activation of human CD2 -expressing TILs using recombinant CD58 protein, and targeted disruption of PD-L1/CMTM6 interactions. Our work identifies an underappreciated yet critical axis at the nexus of cancer immunity and evasion, uncovers a fundamental mechanism of co-inhibitory and -stimulatory signal balancing, and provides new approaches to improving cancer immunotherapies.


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