The Journal of Clinical Investigation (Sep 2022)

Tumor-intrinsic PRC2 inactivation drives a context-dependent immune-desert microenvironment and is sensitized by immunogenic viruses

  • Juan Yan,
  • Yuedan Chen,
  • Amish J. Patel,
  • Sarah Warda,
  • Cindy J. Lee,
  • Briana G. Nixon,
  • Elissa W.P. Wong,
  • Miguel A. Miranda-Román,
  • Ning Yang,
  • Yi Wang,
  • Mohini R. Pachai,
  • Jessica Sher,
  • Emily Giff,
  • Fanying Tang,
  • Ekta Khurana,
  • Sam Singer,
  • Yang Liu,
  • Phillip M. Galbo Jr.,
  • Jesper L.V. Maag,
  • Richard P. Koche,
  • Deyou Zheng,
  • Cristina R. Antonescu,
  • Liang Deng,
  • Ming O. Li,
  • Yu Chen,
  • Ping Chi

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 132, no. 17

Abstract

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Immune checkpoint blockade (ICB) has demonstrated clinical success in “inflamed” tumors with substantial T cell infiltrates, but tumors with an immune-desert tumor microenvironment (TME) fail to benefit. The tumor cell–intrinsic molecular mechanisms of the immune-desert phenotype remain poorly understood. Here, we demonstrated that inactivation of the polycomb-repressive complex 2 (PRC2) core components embryonic ectoderm development (EED) or suppressor of zeste 12 homolog (SUZ12), a prevalent genetic event in malignant peripheral nerve sheath tumors (MPNSTs) and sporadically in other cancers, drove a context-dependent immune-desert TME. PRC2 inactivation reprogramed the chromatin landscape that led to a cell-autonomous shift from primed baseline signaling-dependent cellular responses (e.g., IFN-γ signaling) to PRC2-regulated developmental and cellular differentiation transcriptional programs. Further, PRC2 inactivation led to diminished tumor immune infiltrates through reduced chemokine production and impaired antigen presentation and T cell priming, resulting in primary resistance to ICB. Intratumoral delivery of inactivated modified vaccinia virus Ankara (MVA) enhanced tumor immune infiltrates and sensitized PRC2-loss tumors to ICB. Our results identify molecular mechanisms of PRC2 inactivation–mediated, context-dependent epigenetic reprogramming that underline the immune-desert phenotype in cancer. Our studies also point to intratumoral delivery of immunogenic viruses as an initial therapeutic strategy to modulate the immune-desert TME and capitalize on the clinical benefit of ICB.

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