Advanced Science (Sep 2023)

S100A5 Attenuates Efficiency of Anti‐PD‐L1/PD‐1 Immunotherapy by Inhibiting CD8+ T Cell‐Mediated Anti‐Cancer Immunity in Bladder Carcinoma

  • Huihuang Li,
  • Jinbo Chen,
  • Zhenghao Li,
  • Minfeng Chen,
  • Zhenyu Ou,
  • Miao Mo,
  • Ruizhe Wang,
  • Shiyu Tong,
  • Peihua Liu,
  • Zhiyong Cai,
  • Chunyu Zhang,
  • Zhi Liu,
  • Dingshan Deng,
  • Jinhui Liu,
  • Chunliang Cheng,
  • Jiao Hu,
  • Xiongbing Zu

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1002/advs.202300110
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 10, no. 25
pp. n/a – n/a

Abstract

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Abstract Although immune checkpoint blockade (ICB) therapies have been approved for bladder cancer (BLCA), only a minority of patients respond to these therapies, and there is an urgent need to explore combined therapies. Systematic multi‐omics analysis identified S100A5 as a novel immunosuppressive target for BLCA. The expression of S100A5 in malignant cells inhibited CD8+ T cell recruitment by decreasing pro‐inflammatory chemokine secretion. Furthermore, S100A5 attenuated effector T cell killing of cancer cells by inhibiting CD8+ T cell proliferation and cytotoxicity. In addition, S100A5 acted as an oncogene, thereby promoting tumor proliferation and invasion. Targeting S100A5 synergized with the efficacy of anti‐PD‐1 treatment by enhancing infiltration and cytotoxicity of CD8+ T cells in vivo. Clinically, there was a spatially exclusive relationship between S100A5+ tumor cells and CD8+ T cells in tissue microarrays. Moreover, S100A5 negatively correlated with immunotherapy efficacy in our real‐world and several public immunotherapy cohorts. In summary, S100A5 shapes a non‐inflamed tumor microenvironment in BLCA by inhibiting the secretion of pro‐inflammatory chemokines and the recruitment and cytotoxicity of CD8+ T cells. Targeting S100A5 converts cold tumors into hot tumors, thus enhancing the efficacy of ICB therapy in BLCA.

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