VISTA-induced tumor suppression by a four amino acid intracellular motif

Yan Zhao(Southwestern Medical Center), T Andoh(Southwestern Medical Center), Fatima Charles(Southwestern Medical Center), Priyanka Reddy(Southwestern Medical Center), Kristina Paul(Palo Alto University), Harsh Goar(Southwestern Medical Center), Ishrat Durdana(Southwestern Medical Center), Caiden J. Golder(Southwestern Medical Center), Ashley Hardy(Southwestern Medical Center), Marisa M. Juntilla(Palo Alto University), Soo‐Ryum Yang(Palo Alto University), Chien‐Yu Lin(Palo Alto University), Idit Sagiv-Barfi(Palo Alto University), Benjamin S. Geller(Palo Alto University), Stephen Moore(Southwestern Medical Center), Dipti Thakkar(Hummingbird Scientific (United States)), Jerome D. Boyd‐Kirkup(Hummingbird Scientific (United States)), Yan Peng(Southwestern Medical Center), James M. Ford(Palo Alto University), Melinda L. Telli(Palo Alto University), Song Zhang(Southwestern Medical Center), Allison W. Kurian(Palo Alto University), Robert B. West(Palo Alto University), Tao Yue(Southwestern Medical Center), Andrew M. Lipchik(Eugene Applebaum College of Pharmacy and Health Sciences), Michael P. Snyder(Palo Alto University), Joshua J. Gruber(Southwestern Medical Center)
bioRxiv (Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory)
January 5, 2025
Cited by 7Open Access
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Abstract

VISTA is a key immune checkpoint receptor under investigation for cancer immunotherapy; however, its signaling mechanisms remain unclear. Here we identify a conserved four amino acid (NPGF) intracellular motif in VISTA that suppresses cell proliferation by constraining cell-intrinsic growth receptor signaling. The NPGF motif binds to the adapter protein NUMB and recruits Rab11 endosomal recycling machinery. We identify and characterize a class of triple-negative breast cancers with high VISTA expression and low proliferative index. In tumor cells with high VISTA levels, the NPGF motif sequesters NUMB at endosomes, which interferes with epidermal growth factor receptor (EGFR) trafficking and signaling to suppress tumor growth. These effects do not require canonical VISTA ligands, nor a functioning immune system. As a consequence of VISTA expression, EGFR receptor remains abnormally phosphorylated and cannot propagate ligand-induced signaling. Mutation of the VISTA NPGF domain reverts VISTA-induced growth suppression in multiple breast cancer mouse models. These results define a mechanism by which VISTA represses NUMB to control malignant epithelial cell growth and signaling. They also define distinct intracellular residues that are critical for VISTA-induced cell-intrinsic signaling that could be exploited to improve immunotherapy.


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