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A small-molecule P2RX7 activator promotes anti-tumor immune responses and sensitizes lung tumor to immunotherapy.

Laetitia DouguetSerena Janho Dit HreichJonathan BenzaquenLaetitia SeguinThierry JuhelXavier DezitterChristophe DurantonBernhard RyffelJean KanellopoulosCécile DelarasseNicolas RenaultChristophe FurmanGermain HomerinChloé FéralJulien Cherfils-ViciniRégis MilletSahil AdriouchAlina GhinetPaul HofmanValérie Vouret-Craviari
Published in: Nature communications (2021)
Only a subpopulation of non-small cell lung cancer (NSCLC) patients responds to immunotherapies, highlighting the urgent need to develop therapeutic strategies to improve patient outcome. We develop a chemical positive modulator (HEI3090) of the purinergic P2RX7 receptor that potentiates αPD-1 treatment to effectively control the growth of lung tumors in transplantable and oncogene-induced mouse models and triggers long lasting antitumor immune responses. Mechanistically, the molecule stimulates dendritic P2RX7-expressing cells to generate IL-18 which leads to the production of IFN-γ by Natural Killer and CD4+ T cells within tumors. Combined with immune checkpoint inhibitor, the molecule induces a complete tumor regression in 80% of LLC tumor-bearing mice. Cured mice are also protected against tumor re-challenge due to a CD8-dependent protective response. Hence, combination treatment of small-molecule P2RX7 activator followed by immune checkpoint inhibitor represents a strategy that may be active against NSCLC.
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