PD-L1 promotes oncolytic virus infection via a metabolic shift that inhibits the type I IFN pathway.
Jonathan J HodginsJohn Abou-HamadColin Edward O'DwyerAsh HagermanEdward YakubovichChristiano Tanese de SouzaMarie MarotelAriel BuchlerSaleh FadelMaria M ParkClaire Fong-McMasterMathieu Joseph François CrupiOlivia Joan MakinsonReem KurdiehReza RezaeiHarkirat Singh DhillonCarolina S IlkowJohn Cameron BellMary-Ellen HarperBenjamin H RotsteinRebecca A C AuerBarbara C VanderhydenLuc A SabourinMarie-Claude Bourgeois-DaigneaultDavid P CookMichele ArdolinoPublished in: The Journal of experimental medicine (2024)
While conventional wisdom initially postulated that PD-L1 serves as the inert ligand for PD-1, an emerging body of literature suggests that PD-L1 has cell-intrinsic functions in immune and cancer cells. In line with these studies, here we show that engagement of PD-L1 via cellular ligands or agonistic antibodies, including those used in the clinic, potently inhibits the type I interferon pathway in cancer cells. Hampered type I interferon responses in PD-L1-expressing cancer cells resulted in enhanced efficacy of oncolytic viruses in vitro and in vivo. Consistently, PD-L1 expression marked tumor explants from cancer patients that were best infected by oncolytic viruses. Mechanistically, PD-L1 promoted a metabolic shift characterized by enhanced glycolysis rate that resulted in increased lactate production. In turn, lactate inhibited type I IFN responses. In addition to adding mechanistic insight into PD-L1 intrinsic function, our results will also help guide the numerous ongoing efforts to combine PD-L1 antibodies with oncolytic virotherapy in clinical trials.