miR-15a and miR-15b modulate natural killer and CD8+T-cell activation and anti-tumor immune response by targeting PD-L1 in neuroblastoma

Neuroblastoma (NB) is an enigmatic and deadliest pediatric cancer to treat. The major obstacles to the effective immunotherapy treatments in NB are defective immune cells and the immune evasion tactics deployed by the tumor cells and the stromal microenvironment. Nervous system development during em...

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Published inMolecular therapy. Oncolytics Vol. 25; pp. 308 - 329
Main Authors Pathania, Anup S., Prathipati, Philip, Olwenyi, Omalla A., Chava, Srinivas, Smith, Oghenetejiri V., Gupta, Subash C., Chaturvedi, Nagendra K., Byrareddy, Siddappa N., Coulter, Don W., Challagundla, Kishore B.
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published United States Elsevier Inc 16.06.2022
American Society of Gene & Cell Therapy
Elsevier
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Summary:Neuroblastoma (NB) is an enigmatic and deadliest pediatric cancer to treat. The major obstacles to the effective immunotherapy treatments in NB are defective immune cells and the immune evasion tactics deployed by the tumor cells and the stromal microenvironment. Nervous system development during embryonic and pediatric stages is critically mediated by non-coding RNAs such as micro RNAs (miR). Hence, we explored the role of miRs in anti-tumor immune response via a range of data-driven workflows and in vitro & in vivo experiments. Using the TARGET, NB patient dataset (n=249), we applied the robust bioinformatic workflows incorporating differential expression, co-expression, survival, heatmaps, and box plots. We initially demonstrated the role of miR-15a-5p (miR-15a) and miR-15b-5p (miR-15b) as tumor suppressors, followed by their negative association with stromal cell percentages and a statistically significant negative regulation of T and natural killer (NK) cell signature genes, especially CD274 (PD-L1) in stromal-low patient subsets. The NB phase-specific expression of the miR-15a/miR-15b-PD-L1 axis was further corroborated using the PDX (n=24) dataset. We demonstrated miR-15a/miR-15b mediated degradation of PD-L1 mRNA through its interaction with the 3'-untranslated region and the RNA-induced silencing complex using sequence-specific luciferase activity and Ago2 RNA immunoprecipitation assays. In addition, we established miR-15a/miR-15b induced CD8+T and NK cell activation and cytotoxicity against NB in vitro. Moreover, injection of murine cells expressing miR-15a reduced tumor size, tumor vasculature and enhanced the activation and infiltration of CD8+T and NK cells into the tumors in vivo. We further established that blocking the surface PD-L1 using an anti-PD-L1 antibody rescued miR-15a/miR-15b induced CD8+T and NK cell-mediated anti-tumor responses. These findings demonstrate that miR-15a and miR-15b induce an anti-tumor immune response by targeting PD-L1 in NB. [Display omitted] Neuroblastoma is one of the deadliest pediatric cancers and shows resistance to therapy due to a diminished anti-tumor immune response. Patients with higher PD-L1, reduced miR-15a, and miR-15b are further associated with poor survival. Our findings demonstrate that miR-15a and miR-15b induce an anti-tumor immune response by targeting PD-L1 in neuroblastoma.
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ISSN:2372-7705
2372-7705
DOI:10.1016/j.omto.2022.03.010