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Up-regulated PLA2G10 in cancer impairs T cell infiltration to dampen immunity.

Tianxiang ZhangWeiwei YuXiaoxiao ChengJacky T YeungViviana AhumadaPaul C NorrisMackenzie J PearsonXuan YangWillemijn van DeursenChristina HalcovichAla NassarMatthew D. VeselyYu ZhangJianping ZhangLan JiDallas B FliesLinda LiuSolomon LangermannWilliam J LaRochelleRachel HumphreyDejian ZhaoQiuyu ZhangJindong ZhangRunxia GuKurt A SchalperMiguel F SanmamedLieping Chen
Published in: Science immunology (2024)
T cells are often absent from human cancer tissues during both spontaneously induced immunity and therapeutic immunotherapy, even in the presence of a functional T cell-recruiting chemokine system, suggesting the existence of T cell exclusion mechanisms that impair infiltration. Using a genome-wide in vitro screening platform, we identified a role for phospholipase A2 group 10 (PLA2G10) protein in T cell exclusion. PLA2G10 up-regulation is widespread in human cancers and is associated with poor T cell infiltration in tumor tissues. PLA2G10 overexpression in immunogenic mouse tumors excluded T cells from infiltration, resulting in resistance to anti-PD-1 immunotherapy. PLA2G10 can hydrolyze phospholipids into small lipid metabolites, thus inhibiting chemokine-mediated T cell mobility. Ablation of PLA2G10's enzymatic activity enhanced T cell infiltration and sensitized PLA2G10-overexpressing tumors to immunotherapies. Our study implicates a role for PLA2G10 in T cell exclusion from tumors and suggests a potential target for cancer immunotherapy.
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