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Targeting Vitamin-D receptor (VDR) by a small molecule antagonist MeTC7 inhibits PD-L1 but controls THMYCN neuroblastoma growth PD-L1 independently

Singh, R. K.; Kim, K.; Rowswell-Turner, R. B.; Hansen, J. N.; Khazan, N.; Jones, A.; Sivagnanalingam, U.; Teramoto, Y.; Goto, T.; Jian, Y.; Battaglia, N.; Conley, T.; Hovanesian, V.; Yano, N.; Pandita, R.; Arnold, L. A.; Hopson, R.; Ojha, D.; Sharon, A.; Ashton, J.; Miyamoto, H.; Schor, N. F.; Milano, M. T.; Linehan, D. T.; Gerber, S. A.; Moore, R.

2020-08-17 cancer biology
10.1101/2020.08.16.252940 bioRxiv
Show abstract

Vitamin-D receptor (VDR) mRNA is enriched in malignant lung, ovarian and pancreatic tissues and showed poor prognoses. Calcitriol and stable or CRISPR-directed VDR upregulation increased PD-L1mRNA and protein expression in cancer cells in-vitro. A ChIP assay showed the binding of VDR with VDREPD-L1. Stattic, a STAT3 phosphorylation inhibitor blocked calcitriol or VDR overexpression induced PD-L1 upregulation. MeTC7, a VDR antagonist developed by us, reduced PD-L1 expression on macrophages, ovarian, lung, breast, and pancreatic cancer cells in-vitro. In radiotherapy inducible PD-L1 model of orthotopic MC38 murine colon cancer, MeTC7 decreased PD-L1 surface expression, suppressed inflammatory monocytes (IMs) population and increased intra-tumoral CD69+PD1+CD8+T-cells. Intriguingly, MeTC7 reduced TH-MYCN transgenic neuroblastoma tumor growth without affecting PD-L1 and tumor immune milieu. In summary, Vitamin-D/VDR drives PD-L1 expression on cancer cells via STAT-3. Inhibiting VDR exhibited anti-checkpoint effects in orthotopic colon tumors, whereas PDL1-independent and anti-VDR/MYCN effects controlled growth of transgenic neuroblastoma and xenografted tumors. SummaryVitamin-D/VDR induces PD-L1 expression on cancer cells via STAT-3; and targeting VDR by a novel small molecule antagonist MeTC7 exhibits both anti-PD-L1 and anti-VDR/MYCN effects in tumor models.

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