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Silencing EGFR-upregulated expression of CD55 and CD59 activates the complement system and sensitizes lung cancer to checkpoint blockade.

Fei ShaoYibo GaoWei WangHaiyan HeLiwei XiaoXiao GengYan XiaDong GuoJing FangJie HeZhimin Lu
Published in: Nature cancer (2022)
The complement system is a critical immune component, yet its role in tumor immune evasion and CD8 + T cell activation is not clearly defined. Here, we demonstrate that epidermal growth factor receptor (EGFR)/Wnt signaling induces β-catenin-mediated long noncoding RNA (lncRNA) LINC00973 expression to sponge CD55-targeting miR-216b and CD59-targeting miR-150. The consequently upregulated CD55/CD59 expression suppresses the complement system and cytokine secretion required for CD8 + T cell activation. CD55/CD59-neutralizing antibody treatment or mutation of the LINC00973 promoter activates the complement and CD8 + T cells, inhibiting tumor growth. Importantly, combined anti-CD55/CD59 and anti-programmed death 1 (anti-PD-1) antibody treatments elicit a synergistic tumor-inhibiting effect. In addition, CD55/CD59 levels are inversely correlated with infiltration of M1 macrophages and CD8 + T cells in human lung cancer specimens and predict patient outcome. These findings underscore the critical role of EGFR/Wnt/β-catenin-upregulated CD55/CD59 expression in inhibiting the complement and CD8 + T cell activation for tumor immune evasion and immune checkpoint blockade resistance and identify a potential combination therapy to overcome these effects.
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