Zosuquidar Promotes Antitumor Immunity by Inducing Autophagic Degradation of PD‐L1

Author:

Ding Ling12ORCID,Guo Hongjie13,Zhang Jie1,Zheng Mingming1,Zhang Wenjie1,Wang Longsheng1,Du Qianqian1,Zhou Chen1,Xu Yanjun4,Wu Honghai1,He Qiaojun156,Yang Bo153ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Zhejiang Province Key Laboratory of Anti‐Cancer Drug Research Institute of Pharmacology and Toxicology College of Pharmaceutical Sciences Zhejiang University Hangzhou 310058 China

2. Nanhu Brain‐Computer Interface Institute Hangzhou 311100 China

3. School of Medicine Hangzhou City University Hangzhou 310015 China

4. The Cancer Hospital of University of Chinese Academy of Sciences (Zhejiang Cancer Hospital) Chinese Academy of Sciences Hangzhou 310022 China

5. The Innovation Institute for Artificial Intelligence in Medicine Zhejiang University Hangzhou 310018 China

6. Cancer Center of Zhejiang University Hangzhou 310058 China

Abstract

AbstractThe intracellular distribution and transportation process are essential for maintaining PD‐L1 (programmed death‐ligand 1) expression, and intervening in this cellular process may provide promising therapeutic strategies. Here, through a cell‐based high content screening, it is found that the ABCB1 (ATP binding cassette subfamily B member 1) modulator zosuquidar dramatically suppresses PD‐L1 expression by triggering its autophagic degradation. Mechanistically, ABCB1 interacts with PD‐L1 and impairs COP II‐mediated PD‐L1 transport from ER (endoplasmic reticulum) to Golgi apparatus. The treatment of zosuquidar enhances ABCB1‐PD‐L1 interaction and leads the ER retention of PD‐L1, which is subsequently degraded in the SQSTM1‐dependent selective autophagy pathway. In CT26 mouse model and a humanized xenograft mouse model, zosuquidar significantly suppresses tumor growth and accompanies by increased infiltration of cytotoxic T cells. In summary, this study indicates that ABCB1 serves as a negative regulator of PD‐L1, and zosuquidar may act as a potential immunotherapy agent by triggering PD‐L1 degradation in the early secretory pathway.

Funder

National Natural Science Foundation of China

Publisher

Wiley

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