The Journal of Clinical Investigation (Apr 2022)

Histone methyltransferase WHSC1 loss dampens MHC-I antigen presentation pathway to impair IFN-γ–stimulated antitumor immunity

  • Jiale Ren,
  • Ni Li,
  • Siyu Pei,
  • Yannan Lian,
  • Li Li,
  • Yuchong Peng,
  • Qiuli Liu,
  • Jiacheng Guo,
  • Xuege Wang,
  • Ying Han,
  • Guoying Zhang,
  • Hanling Wang,
  • Yaqi Li,
  • Jun Jiang,
  • Qintong Li,
  • Minjia Tan,
  • Junjie Peng,
  • Guohong Hu,
  • Yichuan Xiao,
  • Xiong Li,
  • Moubin Lin,
  • Jun Qin

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 132, no. 8

Abstract

Read online

IFN-γ–stimulated MHC class I (MHC-I) antigen presentation underlies the core of antitumor immunity. However, sustained IFN-γ signaling also enhances the programmed death ligand 1 (PD-L1) checkpoint pathway to dampen antitumor immunity. It remains unclear how these opposing effects of IFN-γ are regulated. Here, we report that loss of the histone dimethyltransferase WHSC1 impaired the antitumor effect of IFN-γ signaling by transcriptional downregulation of the MHC-I machinery without affecting PD-L1 expression in colorectal cancer (CRC) cells. Whsc1 loss promoted tumorigenesis via a non-cell-autonomous mechanism in an Apcmin/+ mouse model, CRC organoids, and xenografts. Mechanistically, we found that the IFN-γ/STAT1 signaling axis stimulated WHSC1 expression and, in turn, that WHSC1 directly interacted with NLRC5 to promote MHC-I gene expression, but not that of PD-L1. Concordantly, silencing Whsc1 diminished MHC-I levels, impaired antitumor immunity, and blunted the effect of immune checkpoint blockade. Patient cohort analysis revealed that WHSC1 expression positively correlated with enhanced MHC-I expression, tumor-infiltrating T cells, and favorable disease outcomes. Together, our findings establish a tumor-suppressive function of WHSC1 that relays IFN-γ signaling to promote antigen presentation on CRC cells and provide a rationale for boosting WHSC1 activity in immunotherapy.

Keywords