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Merck
  • STAT1 is regulated by TRIM24 and promotes immunosuppression in head and neck squamous carcinoma cells, but enhances T cell antitumour immunity in the tumour microenvironment.

STAT1 is regulated by TRIM24 and promotes immunosuppression in head and neck squamous carcinoma cells, but enhances T cell antitumour immunity in the tumour microenvironment.

British journal of cancer (2022-05-21)
Kelvin Anderson, Nathan Ryan, Divya Nedungadi, Felipe Lamenza, Michael Swingler, Arham Siddiqui, Abhay Satoskar, Puja Upadhaya, Maciej Pietrzak, Steve Oghumu
摘要

Head and neck squamous cell carcinoma (HNSCC) is a significant problem and is frequently resistant to current treatments. STAT1 is important in anti-tumour immune responses against HNSCC. However, the role of STAT1 expression by tumour cells and its regulation during HNSCC is unclear. We determined the effects of STAT1 inhibition on tumour development and immunity in CAL27 and UMSCC22A HNSCC cell lines in vitro and in a HNSCC carcinogen-induced model in vivo. STAT1 siRNA knockdown in human HNSCC cells impaired their proliferation and expression of the immunosuppressive marker PD-L1. Stat1-deficient mice displayed increased oral lesion incidence and multiplicity during tumour carcinogenesis in vivo. Immunosuppressive markers PD-1 in CD8+ T cells and PD-L1 in monocytic MDSCs and macrophages were reduced in oral tumours and draining lymph nodes of tumour-bearing Stat1-deficient mice. However, STAT1 was required for anti-tumour functions of T cells during HNSCC in vivo. Finally, we identified TRIM24 to be a negative regulator of STAT1 that plays a similar tumorigenic function to STAT1 in vitro and thus may be a potential target when treating HNSCC. Our findings indicate that STAT1 activity plays an important role in tumorigenicity and immunosuppression during HNSCC development.

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UM-SCC-22A Squamous Carcinoma Cell Line, UM-SCC-22A is a unique head and neck squamous carcinoma cell line obtained from the surgical resection of the primary cancer of the hypopharynx of a female patient and is a suitable in vitro model of H&N carcinoma studies.