Heliyon (Sep 2024)

Targeting autophagy can synergize the efficacy of immune checkpoint inhibitors against therapeutic resistance: New promising strategy to reinvigorate cancer therapy

  • Mehrdad Hashemi,
  • Elaheh Mohandesi Khosroshahi,
  • Mahsa Tanha,
  • Saloomeh Khoushab,
  • Anahita Bizhanpour,
  • Farnaz Azizi,
  • Mahsa Mohammadzadeh,
  • Arash Matinahmadi,
  • Zeinab Khazaei Koohpar,
  • Saba Asadi,
  • Hengameh Taheri,
  • Ramin Khorrami,
  • Marzieh Ramezani Farani,
  • Mohsen Rashidi,
  • Mahdi Rezaei,
  • Eisa Fattah,
  • Afshin Taheriazam,
  • Maliheh Entezari

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 10, no. 18
p. e37376

Abstract

Read online

Immune checkpoints are a set of inhibitory and stimulatory molecules/mechanisms that affect the activity of immune cells to maintain the existing balance between pro- and anti-inflammatory signaling pathways and avoid the progression of autoimmune disorders. Tumor cells can employ these checkpoints to evade immune system. The discovery and development of immune checkpoint inhibitors (ICIs) was thereby a milestone in the area of immuno-oncology. ICIs stimulate anti-tumor immune responses primarily by disrupting co-inhibitory signaling mechanisms and accelerate immune-mediated killing of tumor cells. Despite the beneficial effects of ICIs, they sometimes encounter some degrees of therapeutic resistance, and thereby do not effectively act against tumors. Among multiple combination therapies have been introduced to date, targeting autophagy, as a cellular degradative process to remove expired organelles and subcellular constituents, has represented with potential capacities to overcome ICI-related therapy resistance. It has experimentally been illuminated that autophagy induction blocks the immune checkpoint molecules when administered in conjugation with ICIs, suggesting that autophagy activation may restrict therapeutic challenges that ICIs have encountered with. However, the autophagy flux can also provoke the immune escape of tumors, which must be considered. Since the conventional FDA-approved ICIs have designed and developed to target programmed cell death receptor/ligand 1 (PD-1/PD-L1) as well as cytotoxic T lymphocyte-associated molecule 4 (CTLA-4) immune checkpoint molecules, we aim to review the effects of autophagy targeting in combination with anti-PD-1/PD-L1- and anti-CTLA-4-based ICIs on cancer therapeutic resistance and tumor immune evasion.

Keywords