STING activation promotes robust immune response and NK cell-mediated tumor regression in glioblastoma models

Author:

Berger GillesORCID,Knelson Erik H.,Jimenez-Macias Jorge L.,Nowicki Michal O.,Han Saemi,Panagioti Eleni,Lizotte Patrick H.,Adu-Berchie Kwasi,Stafford Alexander,Dimitrakakis Nikolaos,Zhou Lanlan,Chiocca E. Antonio,Mooney David J.,Barbie David A.,Lawler Sean E.

Abstract

AbstractImmunotherapy has had a tremendous impact on cancer treatment in the past decade, with hitherto unseen responses at advanced and metastatic stages of the disease. However, the aggressive brain tumor glioblastoma (GBM) is highly immunosuppressive and remains largely refractory to current immunotherapeutic approaches. The cGAS-STING cytoplasmic double stranded DNA (dsDNA) sensing pathway has emerged as a next-generation immunotherapy target with potent local immune stimulatory properties.Here, we investigated the status of the STING pathway in GBM and the modulation of the brain tumor microenvironment (TME) with the STING agonist ADU-S100. Our data reveal the presence of STING in human GBM specimens, where it stains strongly in the tumor vasculature. We show that human GBM explants can respond to STING agonist treatment by secretion of inflammatory cytokines. In murine GBM models, we show a profound shift in the tumor immune landscape after STING agonist treatment, with massive infiltration of the tumor-bearing hemisphere with innate immune cells including inflammatory macrophages, neutrophils and NK populations. Treatment of established murine intracranial GL261 and CT-2A tumors by biodegradable ADU-S100-loaded intracranial implants demonstrated a significant increase in survival in both models and long-term survival with immune memory in GL261. Responses to treatment were abolished by NK cell depletion. This study reveals therapeutic potential and deep remodeling of the TME by STING activation in GBM and warrants the further examination of STING agonists alone or in combination with other immunotherapies such as cancer vaccines, CAR T cells, NK therapies or immune checkpoint blockade.Significance statementModulation of the immune microenvironment is critical for immunosuppressive and therapy refractory tumors like glioblastoma. Activation of the STING pathway deeply remodels the brain tumor environment and attracts innate immune cells and natural killer cell populations, producing a robust antitumor effect with long-term immune memory. We further show that human glioblastoma tissue can respond to the therapy and lay the foundations for combined intracranial immunotherapies by using crosslinked biodegradable brain implants.

Publisher

Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory

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