4.7 Article

STING activation normalizes the intraperitoneal vascular-immune microenvironment and suppresses peritoneal carcinomatosis of colon cancer

Journal

JOURNAL FOR IMMUNOTHERAPY OF CANCER
Volume 9, Issue 6, Pages -

Publisher

BMJ PUBLISHING GROUP
DOI: 10.1136/jitc-2020-002195

Keywords

immune evation; immunotherapy; interferon inducers; tumor microenvironment; immune reconstitution

Funding

  1. National Research Foundation of Korea (NRF) - Korea government (MSIT) [NRF-2020R1A2C2004530, NRF-2020R1C1C1010722]
  2. Korea Medical Device Development Fund - Korea government (the Ministry of Science and ICT)
  3. Ministry of Trade, Industry and Energy
  4. Ministry of Health Welfare
  5. Ministry of Food and Drug Safety [202012D21-01]

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STING activation can normalize the peritoneal vascular and immune microenvironment, converting immunologically cold peritoneal tumors into T-cell-inflamed tumors and providing a rationale for a novel combination therapeutic strategy for peritoneal carcinomatosis in colon cancer.
Background Peritoneal carcinomatosis is a fatal clinical presentation of colon cancer, characterized by unresponsiveness to conventional anticancer therapies, including immune checkpoint inhibitors. Here, we elucidated the immune-evasion mechanisms during the peritoneal carcinomatosis of colon cancer and developed a novel immunotherapy by activating the stimulator of interferon genes (STING) pathway. Methods We generated a syngeneic peritoneal carcinomatosis model of colon cancer. Mice were intraperitoneally treated with either STING agonist (MIW815, also known as ADU-S100) or PD-1 blockade or both. The tumor microenvironment was comprehensively analyzed using multiplexed immunofluorescence imaging, flow cytometry, and NanoString immune profiling. Results Intraperitoneal colon cancer cells induce a massive influx of immunosuppressive M2-like macrophages, upregulate immune checkpoints, and impair effector T cell functions during peritoneal dissemination; these collectively create a highly angiogenic and immunosuppressive milieu that is resistant to anti-PD-1 monotherapy. Intraperitoneal administration of a STING agonist suppressed aberrant angiogenesis, increased pericyte coverage, and normalized tumor vessels, thereby facilitating the infiltration of activated CD8(+) T cells into peritoneal tumor nodules. Moreover, STING activation reprogramed tumor-associated macrophages toward the M1 phenotype. STING activation converted immunologically cold peritoneal tumors into T-cell-inflamed tumors in a type-I interferon-dependent manner. Lastly, the STING agonist synergistically cooperated with PD-1 and/or COX2 blockade to further suppress the peritoneal dissemination of colon cancer, resulting in complete eradication of tumor and ascites, and inducing durable antitumor immunity. Conclusions STING activation can normalize the peritoneal vascular and immune microenvironment, providing a rationale for a novel combination therapeutic strategy for peritoneal carcinomatosis in colon cancer.

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