BackgroundThe combination of conventional chemotherapy and immune checkpoint inhibitors (ICIs) has been unsuccessful for pancreatic ductal adenocarcinoma (PDAC). Administration of maximum tolerated dose of chemotherapy drugs may have immunosuppressive effects.MethodsWe thus tested, by using the preclinical model of PDACs including the genetically engineered mouse KPC spontaneous pancreatic tumor model and the pancreatic KPC tumor orthotopic implant model, the combinations of synthetic innate immune agonists including STING and NLRP3 agonist, respectively, and ICIs with or without chemotherapy.ResultsWe found that innate agonists potentiate the role of chemotherapy in inducing effector T cells and subsequently to prime the tumor microenvironment (TME) better for ICI treatments. Triple combination of chemotherapy, innate agonists, and ICIs is superior to single modalities or double modalities in antitumor efficacies. Adding chemotherapy to innate agonists enhances the infiltration of overall CD8+ T cells and the memory cytotoxic subtype. NLRP3 agonist has a less effect than STING agonist on driving the T cell exhaustion. Adding chemotherapy to innate agonists enhances the infiltration of dendritic cells (DCs) in the tumors and CD86+ mature DCs in tumor draining lymph nodes. RNA sequencing analysis of the pancreatic tumors demonstrates the role of the combination of STING/NLRP3 agonist and chemotherapy, but not either treatment modality alone, in upregulating the T cell activation signaling. The NLRP3 agonist-mediated T cell activation is likely through regulating the nitrogen metabolism pathways.ConclusionThis study supports the clinical testing of both STING and NLRP3 agonists, respectively, in combination with chemotherapy to sensitize PDAC patients for ICI treatments.
基金:
Bristol-Myers Squibb II-ON grant (L. Zheng).
LZ is supported by an NIH Grant R01 CA169702, an NIH Grant R01 CA197296,
an NIH Grant P01 CA247886, an NIH SPORE Grant P50 CA062924, and an NIH
Cancer Center Support Grant P30 CA006973. KL is supported by a National
Natural Science Foundation of China 82303740, a Key Research and Development Project of Science and Technology Department of Sichuan Province
2023YFS0167, a China Postdoctoral Science Foundation 2023T160451, and a
West China Hospital Postdoctoral Science Foundation 2023HXBH053. J.W. is
supported by a National Natural Science Foundation of China for Young Scientists Fund 82403318, a Sichuan Natural Science Foundation Youth Foundation
Project 2024NSFSC1949, and a Postdoctor Research Fund of West China Hospital, Sichuan University 2024HXBH134.
Niu Nan,Li Keyu,Wang Junke,et al.Chemotherapy in synergy with innate immune agonists enhances T cell priming for checkpoint inhibitor treatment in pancreatic cancer[J].BIOMARKER RESEARCH.2025,13(1):doi:10.1186/s40364-024-00721-7.
APA:
Niu, Nan,Li, Keyu,Wang, Junke,Funes, Vanessa,Espinoza, Birginia...&Zheng, Lei.(2025).Chemotherapy in synergy with innate immune agonists enhances T cell priming for checkpoint inhibitor treatment in pancreatic cancer.BIOMARKER RESEARCH,13,(1)
MLA:
Niu, Nan,et al."Chemotherapy in synergy with innate immune agonists enhances T cell priming for checkpoint inhibitor treatment in pancreatic cancer".BIOMARKER RESEARCH 13..1(2025)