The CD155/TIGIT axis promotes and maintains immune evasion in neoantigen-expressing pancreatic cancer

William A. Freed-Pastor, Laurens J. Lambert, Zackery A. Ely, Nimisha B. Pattada, Arjun Bhutkar, George Eng, Kim L. Mercer, Ana P. Garcia, Lin Lin, William M. Rideout, William L. Hwang, Jason M. Schenkel, Alex M. Jaeger, Roderick T. Bronson, Peter M.K. Westcott, Tyler D. Hether, Prajan Divakar, Jason W. Reeves, Vikram Deshpande, Toni DeloreyDevan Phillips, Omer H. Yilmaz, Aviv Regev, Tyler Jacks

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

111 Scopus citations

Abstract

The CD155/TIGIT axis can be co-opted during immune evasion in chronic viral infections and cancer. Pancreatic adenocarcinoma (PDAC) is a highly lethal malignancy, and immune-based strategies to combat this disease have been largely unsuccessful to date. We corroborate prior reports that a substantial portion of PDAC harbors predicted high-affinity MHC class I-restricted neoepitopes and extend these findings to advanced/metastatic disease. Using multiple preclinical models of neoantigen-expressing PDAC, we demonstrate that intratumoral neoantigen-specific CD8+ T cells adopt multiple states of dysfunction, resembling those in tumor-infiltrating lymphocytes of PDAC patients. Mechanistically, genetic and/or pharmacologic modulation of the CD155/TIGIT axis was sufficient to promote immune evasion in autochthonous neoantigen-expressing PDAC. Finally, we demonstrate that the CD155/TIGIT axis is critical in maintaining immune evasion in PDAC and uncover a combination immunotherapy (TIGIT/PD-1 co-blockade plus CD40 agonism) that elicits profound anti-tumor responses in preclinical models, now poised for clinical evaluation.

Original languageEnglish (US)
Pages (from-to)1342-1360.e14
JournalCancer cell
Volume39
Issue number10
DOIs
StatePublished - Oct 11 2021
Externally publishedYes

Keywords

  • CD155
  • TIGIT
  • immune evasion
  • immunotherapy
  • pancreatic cancer

ASJC Scopus subject areas

  • Oncology
  • Cancer Research

Fingerprint

Dive into the research topics of 'The CD155/TIGIT axis promotes and maintains immune evasion in neoantigen-expressing pancreatic cancer'. Together they form a unique fingerprint.

Cite this