Transient cell-in-cell formation underlies tumor relapse and resistance to immunotherapy

Author:

Gutwillig Amit1,Santana-Magal Nadine1,Farhat-Younis Leen1,Rasoulouniriana Diana1,Madi Asaf1ORCID,Luxenburg Chen2,Cohen Jonathan2,Padmanabhan Krishnanand2,Shomron Noam2,Shapira Guy2ORCID,Gleiberman Annette1ORCID,Parikh Roma3,Levy Carmit3,Feinmesser Meora14,Hershkovitz Dov15,Zemser-Werner Valentina5,Zlotnik Oran6,Kroon Sanne7ORCID,Hardt Wolf-Dietrich7ORCID,Debets Reno8ORCID,Reticker-Flynn Nathan Edward9,Rider Peleg1,Carmi Yaron1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Pathology, Sackler School of Medicine, Tel Aviv University

2. Cell and Developmental Biology, Sackler School of Medicine, Tel Aviv University

3. Human Molecular Genetics and Biochemistry, Sackler School of Medicine, Tel Aviv University

4. Institute of Pathology, Rabin Medical Center- Beilinson Hospital

5. Institute of Pathology, Tel Aviv Sourasky Medical Center

6. Department of General Surgery, Rabin Medical Center- Beilinson Campus

7. Department of Biology, Institute of Microbiology

8. Department of Medical Oncology, Erasmus MC Cancer Institute

9. School of Medicine, Department of Pathology, Stanford University

Abstract

Despite the remarkable successes of cancer immunotherapies, the majority of patients will experience only partial response followed by relapse of resistant tumors. While treatment resistance has frequently been attributed to clonal selection and immunoediting, comparisons of paired primary and relapsed tumors in melanoma and breast cancers indicate that they share the majority of clones. Here, we demonstrate in both mouse models and clinical human samples that tumor cells evade immunotherapy by generating unique transient cell-in-cell structures, which are resistant to killing by T cells and chemotherapies. While the outer cells in this cell-in-cell formation are often killed by reactive T cells, the inner cells remain intact and disseminate into single tumor cells once T cells are no longer present. This formation is mediated predominantly by IFNγ-activated T cells, which subsequently induce phosphorylation of the transcription factors signal transducer and activator of transcription 3 (STAT3) and early growth response-1 (EGR-1) in tumor cells. Indeed, inhibiting these factors prior to immunotherapy significantly improves its therapeutic efficacy. Overall, this work highlights a currently insurmountable limitation of immunotherapy and reveals a previously unknown resistance mechanism which enables tumor cells to survive immune-mediated killing without altering their immunogenicity.

Funder

Fritz Thyssen Stiftung

Israel Cancer Research Fund

Israel Science Foundation

Tel Aviv University

Publisher

eLife Sciences Publications, Ltd

Subject

General Immunology and Microbiology,General Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology,General Medicine,General Neuroscience

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