학술논문

The efficacy of chemotherapy is limited by intratumoral senescent cells expressing PD-L2
Document Type
Original Paper
Source
Nature Cancer. 5(3):448-462
Subject
Language
English
ISSN
2662-1347
Abstract
Chemotherapy often generates intratumoral senescent cancer cells that strongly modify the tumor microenvironment, favoring immunosuppression and tumor growth. We discovered, through an unbiased proteomics screen, that the immune checkpoint inhibitor programmed cell death 1 ligand 2 (PD-L2) is highly upregulated upon induction of senescence in different types of cancer cells. PD-L2 is not required for cells to undergo senescence, but it is critical for senescent cells to evade the immune system and persist intratumorally. Indeed, after chemotherapy, PD-L2-deficient senescent cancer cells are rapidly eliminated and tumors do not produce the senescence-associated chemokines CXCL1 and CXCL2. Accordingly, PD-L2-deficient pancreatic tumors fail to recruit myeloid-derived suppressor cells and undergo regression driven by CD8 T cells after chemotherapy. Finally, antibody-mediated blockade of PD-L2 strongly synergizes with chemotherapy causing remission of mammary tumors in mice. The combination of chemotherapy with anti-PD-L2 provides a therapeutic strategy that exploits vulnerabilities arising from therapy-induced senescence.
Chaib et al. find that therapy-induced senescent cells have high programmed cell death 1 ligand 2 (PD-L2), contributing to recurrence. They show that PD-L2 blocking combined with chemotherapy is therapeutically beneficial because it reduces senescent cells and immunosuppressive cell recruitment.