ILT2 and ILT4 Drive Myeloid Suppression via Both Overlapping and Distinct Mechanisms
Author:
Tian Jane1ORCID, Ashique Amir M.1ORCID, Weeks Sabrina1ORCID, Lan Tian1ORCID, Yang Hong1ORCID, Chen Hung-I Harry1ORCID, Song Christina1ORCID, Koyano Kikuye1ORCID, Mondal Kalyani1ORCID, Tsai Daniel1ORCID, Cheung Isla1ORCID, Moshrefi Mehrdad1ORCID, Kekatpure Avantika1ORCID, Fan Bin1ORCID, Li Betty1ORCID, Qurashi Samir1ORCID, Rocha Lauren1ORCID, Aguayo Jonathan1ORCID, Rodgers Col1ORCID, Meza Marchelle1ORCID, Heeke Darren1ORCID, Medfisch Sara M.1ORCID, Chu Chun1ORCID, Starck Shelley1ORCID, Basak Nandini Pal2ORCID, Sankaran Satish2ORCID, Malhotra Mohit2ORCID, Crawley Suzanne1ORCID, Tran Thomas-Toan1ORCID, Duey Dana Y.1ORCID, Ho Carmence1ORCID, Mikaelian Igor1ORCID, Liu Wenhui1ORCID, Rivera Lee B.1ORCID, Huang Jiawei1ORCID, Paavola Kevin J.1ORCID, O'Hollaren Kyle1ORCID, Blum Lisa K.1ORCID, Lin Vicky Y.1ORCID, Chen Peirong1ORCID, Iyer Anjushree1ORCID, He Sisi1ORCID, Roda Julie M.1ORCID, Wang Yan1ORCID, Sissons James1ORCID, Kutach Alan K.1ORCID, Kaplan Daniel D.1ORCID, Stone Geoffrey W.1ORCID
Affiliation:
1. 1NGM Biopharmaceuticals, South San Francisco, California. 2. 2Farcast Biosciences, Bengaluru, Karnataka, India.
Abstract
Abstract
Solid tumors are dense three-dimensional (3D) multicellular structures that enable efficient receptor–ligand trans interactions via close cell–cell contact. Immunoglobulin-like transcript (ILT)2 and ILT4 are related immune-suppressive receptors that play a role in the inhibition of myeloid cells within the tumor microenvironment. The relative contribution of ILT2 and ILT4 to immune inhibition in the context of solid tumor tissue has not been fully explored. We present evidence that both ILT2 and ILT4 contribute to myeloid inhibition. We found that although ILT2 inhibits myeloid cell activation in the context of trans-engagement by MHC-I, ILT4 efficiently inhibits myeloid cells in the presence of either cis- or trans-engagement. In a 3D spheroid tumor model, dual ILT2/ILT4 blockade was required for the optimal activation of myeloid cells, including the secretion of CXCL9 and CCL5, upregulation of CD86 on dendritic cells, and downregulation of CD163 on macrophages. Humanized mouse tumor models showed increased immune activation and cytolytic T-cell activity with combined ILT2 and ILT4 blockade, including evidence of the generation of immune niches, which have been shown to correlate with clinical response to immune-checkpoint blockade. In a human tumor explant histoculture system, dual ILT2/ILT4 blockade increased CXCL9 secretion, downregulated CD163 expression, and increased the expression of M1 macrophage, IFNγ, and cytolytic T-cell gene signatures. Thus, we have revealed distinct contributions of ILT2 and ILT4 to myeloid cell biology and provide proof-of-concept data supporting the combined blockade of ILT2 and ILT4 to therapeutically induce optimal myeloid cell reprogramming in the tumor microenvironment.
Funder
NGM Biopharmaceuticals
Publisher
American Association for Cancer Research (AACR)
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