4.6 Article

IDO inhibits a tryptophan sufficiency signal that stimulates mTOR A novel IDO effector pathway targeted by D-1-methyl-tryptophan

期刊

ONCOIMMUNOLOGY
卷 1, 期 9, 页码 1460-1468

出版社

TAYLOR & FRANCIS INC
DOI: 10.4161/onci.21716

关键词

amino acid starvation; autophagy; IDO; IDO2; immunomodulation; mTOR; PKC-theta; S6K; stress signaling; TDO

资金

  1. NCI [CA109542, CA096651]
  2. Lankenau Medical Center Foundation
  3. Daniel B. Green and Florence E. Green Foundation
  4. Main Line Health System
  5. New Link Genetics Corporation

向作者/读者索取更多资源

Tryptophan catabolism by indoleamine 2,3-dioxygenase (IDO) alters inflammation and favors T-cell tolerance in cancer, but the underlying molecular mechanisms remain poorly understood. The integrated stress response kinase GCN2, a sensor of uncharged tRNA that is activated by amino acid deprivation, is recognized as an important effector of the IDO pathway. However, in a mouse model of inflammatory carcinogenesis, ablation of Gcn2 did not promote resistance against tumor development like the absence of IDO does, implying the existence of additional cancer-relevant pathways that operate downstream of IDO. Addressing this gap in knowledge, we report that the IDO-mediated catabolism of tryptophan also inhibits the immunoregulatory kinases mTOR and PKC-Theta, along with the induction of autophagy. These effects were relieved specifically by tryptophan but also by the experimental agent 1-methyl-D-tryptophan (D-1MT, also known as NLG8189), the latter of which reversed the inhibitory signals generated by IDO with higher potency. Taken together, our results implicate mTOR and PKC-Theta in IDO-mediated immunosuppressive signaling, and they provide timely insights into the unique mechanism of action of D-1MT as compared with traditional biochemical inhibitors of IDO. These findings are important translationally, because they suggest broader clinical uses for D-1MT against cancers that overexpress any tryptophan catabolic enzyme (IDO, IDO2 or TDO). Moreover, they define mTOR and PKC-Theta as candidate pharmacodynamic markers for D-1MT responses in patients recruited to ongoing phase IB/II cancer trials, addressing a current clinical need.

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