Author:
Tcyganov Evgenii N.,Kwak Taekyoung,Yang Xue,Poli Adi Narayana Reddy,Hart Colin,Bhuniya Avishek,Cassel Joel,Kossenkov Andrew,Auslander Noam,Lu Lily,Sharma Paridhima,Mendoza Maria De Grecia Cauti,Zhigarev Dmitry,Cadungog Mark Gregory,Jean Stephanie,Chatterjee-Paer Sudeshna,Weiner David,Donthireddy Laxminarasimha,Bristow Bryan,Zhang Rugang,Tyurin Vladimir A.,Tyurina Yulia Y.,Bayir Hülya,Kagan Valerian E.,Salvino Joseph M.,Montaner Luis J.
Abstract
AbstractOvarian cancer remains a major health threat with limited treatment options available. It is characterized by immunosuppressive tumor microenvironment (TME) maintained by tumor- associated macrophages (TAMs) hindering anti-tumor responses and immunotherapy efficacy. Here we show that targeting retinoblastoma protein (Rb) by disruption of its LxCxE cleft pocket, causes cell death in TAMs by induction of ER stress, p53 and mitochondria-related cell death pathways. A reduction of pro-tumor RbhighM2-type macrophages from TME in vivo enhanced T cell infiltration and inhibited cancer progression. We demonstrate an increased Rb expression in TAMs in women with ovarian cancer is associated with poorer prognosis. Ex vivo, we show analogous cell death induction by therapeutic Rb targeting in TAMs in post-surgery ascites from ovarian cancer patients. Overall, our data elucidates therapeutic targeting of the Rb LxCxE cleft pocket as a novel promising approach for ovarian cancer treatment through depletion of TAMs and re-shaping TME immune landscape.Statement of significanceCurrently, targeting immunosuppressive myeloid cells in ovarian cancer microenvironment is the first priority need to enable successful immunotherapy, but no effective solutions are clinically available. We show that targeting LxCxE cleft pocket of Retinoblastoma protein unexpectedly induces preferential cell death in M2 tumor-associated macrophages. Depletion of immunosuppressive M2 tumor-associated macrophages reshapes tumor microenvironment, enhances anti-tumor T cell responses, and inhibits ovarian cancer. Thus, we identify a novel paradoxical function of Retinoblastoma protein in regulating macrophage viability as well as a promising target to enhance immunotherapy efficacy in ovarian cancer.
Publisher
Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory