Biomedicine & Pharmacotherapy (Jul 2024)

Rapamycin circumvents anti PD-1 therapy resistance in colorectal cancer by reducing PD-L1 expression and optimizing the tumor microenvironment

  • Menglei Jia,
  • Zhongwen Yuan,
  • Hang Yu,
  • Senling Feng,
  • Xiaoxiao Tan,
  • Zijing Long,
  • Yanrong Duan,
  • Wenting Zhu,
  • Pengke Yan

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 176
p. 116883

Abstract

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The unresectable or postoperative recurrence of advanced metastatic colorectal cancer (CRC) is the difficulty of its clinical management, and pharmacological therapy is the main source of benefit. Immune checkpoint inhibitors are therapeutic options but are effective in approximately 5 % of patients with deficient mismatch repair (MMR)/microsatellite instability CRC and are ineffective in patients with MMR-proficient (pMMR)/microsatellite stable (MSS) CRCs, which may be associated with the tumor microenvironment (TME). Here, we propose a new combination strategy and evaluate the efficacy of rapamycin (Rapa) combined with anti-PD-1 (αPD-1) in CT26 tumor-bearing mice, azoxymethane (AOM)/dextran sodium sulfate (DSS) inflammation-associated CRC mice, CT26-Luc tumor-bearing mice with postoperative recurrence, and CT26 liver metastasis mice. The results revealed that Rapa improved the therapeutic effect of αPD-1 and effectively inhibited colorectal carcinogenesis, postoperative recurrence, and liver metastasis. Mechanistically, Rapa improved the anticancer effect of αPD-1, associated with Rapa reprograming of the immunosuppressive TME. Rapa effectively depleted α-SMA+ cancer-associated fibroblasts and degraded collagen in the tumor tissue, increasing T lymphocyte infiltration into the tumor tissue. Rapa induced the downregulation of programed cell death 1 ligand 1 (PD-L1) protein and transcript levels in CT26 cells, which may be associated with the inhibition of the mTOR/P70S6K signaling axis. Furthermore, co-culture of tumor cells and CD8+ T lymphocytes demonstrated that Rapa-induced PD-L1 downregulation in tumor cells increased spleen-derived CD8+ T lymphocyte activation. Therefore, Rapa improves the anti-tumor effect of αPD-1 in CRCs, providing new ideas for its use to improve combinatorial strategies for anti-PD-1 immunotherapy.

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