Litcius/Paper detail

PTENα functions as an immune suppressor and promotes immune resistance in PTEN-mutant cancer

Yizhe Sun, Dan Lü, Yue Yin, Jia Song, Yang Liu, Wenyan Hao, Qi Fang, Guangze Zhang, Xin Zhang, Liang Liu, Zhiqiang Lin, Hui Liang, Xuyang Zhao, Yan Jin, Yuxin Yin

2021Nature Communications45 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Abstract PTEN is frequently mutated in human cancers and PTEN mutants promote tumor progression and metastasis. PTEN mutations have been implicated in immune regulation, however, the underlying mechanism is largely unknown. Here, we report that PTENα, the isoform of PTEN, remains active in cancer bearing stop-gained PTEN mutations. Through counteraction of CD8 + T cell-mediated cytotoxicity, PTENα leads to T cell dysfunction and accelerates immune-resistant cancer progression. Clinical analysis further uncovers that PTENα-active mutations suppress host immune responses and result in poor prognosis in cancer as relative to PTENα-inactive mutations. Furthermore, germline deletion of Ptenα in mice increases cell susceptibility to immune attack through augmenting stress granule formation and limiting synthesis of peroxidases, leading to massive oxidative cell death and severe inflammatory damage. We propose that PTENα protects tumor from T cell killing and thus PTENα is a potential target in antitumor immunotherapy.

Topics & Concepts

PTENCancer researchImmune systemBiologyCancerImmunologyCell biologySignal transductionPI3K/AKT/mTOR pathwayGeneticsPI3K/AKT/mTOR signaling in cancerCytokine Signaling Pathways and InteractionsInflammatory mediators and NSAID effects