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Blockade of interleukin 10 potentiates antitumour immune function in human colorectal cancer liver metastases

Kevin M. Sullivan, Xiuyun Jiang, Prajna Guha, Christopher Lausted, Jason A. Carter, Cynthia L. Hsu, Kevin P. Labadie, Karan Kohli, Heidi L. Kenerson, Sara K. Daniel, Xiaowei Yan, Changting Meng, Arezou Abbasi, Marina Chan, Yongwoo David Seo, James O. Park, Ian Nicholas Crispe, Raymond S. Yeung, Teresa S. Kim, Taranjit S. Gujral, Qiang Tian, Steven C. Katz, Venu G. Pillarisetty

2022Gut138 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

OBJECTIVE: Programmed cell death protein 1 (PD-1) checkpoint inhibition and adoptive cellular therapy have had limited success in patients with microsatellite stable colorectal cancer liver metastases (CRLM). We sought to evaluate the effect of interleukin 10 (IL-10) blockade on endogenous T cell and chimeric antigen receptor T (CAR-T) cell antitumour function in CRLM slice cultures. DESIGN: We created organotypic slice cultures from human CRLM (n=38 patients' tumours) and tested the antitumour effects of a neutralising antibody against IL-10 (αIL-10) both alone as treatment and in combination with exogenously administered carcinoembryonic antigen (CEA)-specific CAR-T cells. We evaluated slice cultures with single and multiplex immunohistochemistry, in situ hybridisation, single-cell RNA sequencing, reverse-phase protein arrays and time-lapse fluorescent microscopy. RESULTS: T cells without exhaustion transcription changes, and increased human leukocyte antigen - DR isotype (HLA-DR) expression of macrophages. The antitumour effects of αIL-10 were reversed by major histocompatibility complex class I or II (MHC-I or MHC-II) blockade, confirming the essential role of antigen presenting cells. Interrupting IL-10 signalling also rescued murine CAR-T cell proliferation and cytotoxicity from myeloid cell-mediated immunosuppression. In human CRLM slices, αIL-10 increased CEA-specific CAR-T cell activation and CAR-T cell-mediated cytotoxicity, with nearly 70% carcinoma cell apoptosis across multiple human tumours. Pretreatment with an IL-10 receptor blocking antibody also potentiated CAR-T function. CONCLUSION: Neutralising the effects of IL-10 in human CRLM has therapeutic potential as a stand-alone treatment and to augment the function of adoptively transferred CAR-T cells.

Topics & Concepts

Cancer researchBiologyT cellCD8AntigenImmunologyImmune systemCAR-T cell therapy researchCancer Immunotherapy and BiomarkersCancer Cells and Metastasis
Blockade of interleukin 10 potentiates antitumour immune function in human colorectal cancer liver metastases | Litcius