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A major chromatin regulator determines resistance of tumor cells to T cell-mediated killing.

Deng PanAya KobayashiPeng JiangLucas Ferrari de AndradeRong En TayAdrienne M LuomaDaphne TsoucasXintao QiuKlothilda LimPrakash RaoHenry W LongGuo-Cheng YuanJohn G DoenchMyles BrownX Shirley LiuKai W Wucherpfennig
Published in: Science (New York, N.Y.) (2018)
Many human cancers are resistant to immunotherapy, for reasons that are poorly understood. We used a genome-scale CRISPR-Cas9 screen to identify mechanisms of tumor cell resistance to killing by cytotoxic T cells, the central effectors of antitumor immunity. Inactivation of >100 genes-including Pbrm1, Arid2, and Brd7, which encode components of the PBAF form of the SWI/SNF chromatin remodeling complex-sensitized mouse B16F10 melanoma cells to killing by T cells. Loss of PBAF function increased tumor cell sensitivity to interferon-γ, resulting in enhanced secretion of chemokines that recruit effector T cells. Treatment-resistant tumors became responsive to immunotherapy when Pbrm1 was inactivated. In many human cancers, expression of PBRM1 and ARID2 inversely correlated with expression of T cell cytotoxicity genes, and Pbrm1-deficient murine melanomas were more strongly infiltrated by cytotoxic T cells.
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