4.6 Article

TH-MYCN tumors, but not tumor-derived cell lines, are adrenergic lineage, GD2+, and responsive to anti-GD2 antibody therapy

Journal

ONCOIMMUNOLOGY
Volume 11, Issue 1, Pages -

Publisher

TAYLOR & FRANCIS INC
DOI: 10.1080/2162402X.2022.2075204

Keywords

Cancer immunotherapy; autochthonous cancer models; tumor antigen loss; cancer lineage; myeloidderived suppressor cells

Funding

  1. Team Connor Childhood Cancer Foundation
  2. Department of Defense Translational Team Science [CA 170257]
  3. ALSF
  4. ALSF Young Investigator Award
  5. Hyundai Hope on Wheels [K12 HD043245]
  6. Wipe Out Kids' Cancer
  7. National Center for Advancing Translational Sciences of the National Institutes of Health [TL1TR001880]
  8. Kate Amato Foundation
  9. NIH [K12 HD043245]

Ask authors/readers for more resources

This study demonstrates the utility of a mouse model of neuroblastoma to study immunotherapy approaches and investigate potential factors that determine adrenergic to mesenchymal fate decisions.
Neuroblastoma is a commonly lethal solid tumor of childhood and intensive chemoradiotherapy treatment cures similar to 50% of children with high-risk disease. The addition of immunotherapy using dinutuximab, a monoclonal antibody directed against the GD2 disialoganglioside expressed on neuroblasts, improves survival when incorporated into front-line therapy and shows robust activity in regressing relapsed disease when combined with chemotherapy. Still, many children succumb to neuroblastoma progression despite receiving dinutuximab-based immunotherapy, and efforts to counteract the immune suppressive signals responsible are warranted. Animal models of human cancers provide useful platforms to study immunotherapies. TH-MYCN transgenic mice are immunocompetent and develop neuroblastomas at autochthonous sites due to enforced MYCN expression in developing neural crest tissues. However, GD2-directed immunotherapy in this model has been underutilized due to the prevailing notion that TH-MYCN neuroblasts express insufficient GD2 to be targeted. We demonstrate that neuroblasts in TH-MYCN-driven tumors express GD2 at levels comparable to human neuroblastomas but rapidly lose GD2 expression when explanted ex vivo to establish tumor cell lines. This occurs in association with a transition from an adrenergic to mesenchymal differentiation state. Importantly, not only is GD2 expression retained on tumors in situ, treatment with a murine anti-GD2 antibody, 14G2a, markedly extends survival in such mice, including durable complete responses. Tumors in 14G2a-treated mice have fewer macrophage and myeloid-derived suppressor cells in their tumor microenvironment. Our findings support the utility of this model to inform immunotherapy approaches for neuroblastoma and potential opportunities to investigate drivers of adrenergic to mesenchymal fate decisions.

Authors

I am an author on this paper
Click your name to claim this paper and add it to your profile.

Reviews

Primary Rating

4.6
Not enough ratings

Secondary Ratings

Novelty
-
Significance
-
Scientific rigor
-
Rate this paper

Recommended

No Data Available
No Data Available