Loss of tumor cell MHC Class II drives insensitivity of BRAF-mutant anaplastic thyroid cancers to MAPK inhibitors
Abstract
Cancer cells present neoantigens dominantly through MHC class I (MHCI) to drive tumor rejection through cytotoxic CD8+ T-cells. There is growing recognition that a subset of tumors express MHC class II (MHCII), causing recognition of antigens by TCRs of CD4+ T-cells that contribute to the anti-tumor response. We find that mouse Braf V600E -driven anaplastic thyroid cancers (ATC) respond markedly to the RAF + MEK inhibitors dabrafenib and trametinib (dab/tram) and that this is associated with upregulation of MhcII in cancer cells and increased CD4+ T-cell infiltration. A subset of recurrent tumors lose MhcII expression due to silencing of Ciita , the master transcriptional regulator of MhcII, despite preserved interferon gamma signal transduction, which can be rescued by EZH2 inhibition. Orthotopically-implanted Ciita -/- and H2-Ab1 -/- ATC cells into immune competent mice become unresponsive to the MAPK inhibitors. Moreover, depletion of CD4+, but not CD8+ T-cells, also abrogates response to dab/tram. These findings implicate MHCII-driven CD4+ T cell activation as a key determinant of the response of Braf-mutant ATCs to MAPK inhibition.
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