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Tumor cell p38 inhibition to overcome immunotherapy resistance.

Jason John LukeRebekah DadeyRyan AugustinSarah NewmanKrishna SinghRose DoerflerSarah BehrPatrice LeeBrian IsettChristopher DeitrickAofei LiMarion JoyCarly ReederKatelyn SmithJulie UrbanLorenzo SellittoMark JelinekSusan ChristnerJan BeumerLiza VillaruzAditi KulkarniDiwakar DavarAndrew PoklepovicYana NajjarDan ZandbergAdam SoloffTullia C BrunoLazar VujanovicHeath SkinnerRobert FerrisRiyue Bao
Published in: Research square (2023)
Patients with tumors that do not respond to immune-checkpoint inhibition often harbor a non-T cell-inflamed tumor microenvironment, characterized by the absence of IFN-γ-associated CD8+ T cell and dendritic cell activation. Understanding the molecular mechanisms underlying immune exclusion in non-responding patients may enable the development of novel combination therapies. p38 MAPK is a known regulator of dendritic and myeloid cells however a tumor-intrinsic immunomodulatory role has not been previously described. Here we identify tumor cell p38 signaling as a therapeutic target to potentiate anti-tumor immunity and overcome resistance to immune-checkpoint inhibitors (ICI). Molecular analysis of tumor tissues from patients with human papillomavirus-negative head and neck squamous carcinoma reveals a p38-centered network enriched in non-T cell-inflamed tumors. Pan-cancer single-cell RNA analysis suggests that p38 activation may be an immune-exclusion mechanism across multiple tumor types. P38 knockdown in cancer cell lines increases T cell migration, and p38 inhibition plus ICI in preclinical models shows greater efficacy compared to monotherapies. In a clinical trial of patients refractory to PD1/L1 therapy, pexmetinib, a p38 inhibitor, plus nivolumab demonstrated deep and durable clinical responses. Targeting of p38 with anti-PD1 has the potential to induce the T cell-inflamed phenotype and overcome immunotherapy resistance.
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