Abstract PO-072: Inhibiting vasoactive intestinal peptide receptor signaling elicits T cell dependent anti-tumor response of pancreatic ductal adenocarcinoma to immune checkpoint therapy

2021 
Pancreatic ductal adenocarcinoma (PDAC) is unresponsive to immune checkpoint therapy largely due to a paucity of T cells within the tumor microenvironment (TME) and abundant immunosuppressive signaling pathways. In this study we show that human PDAC tumors over-express vasoactive intestinal peptide (VIP), an immunosuppressive neuropeptide that suppresses T cell effector properties and promotes the generation of regulatory T cells (Tregs). Therefore, we treated tumor-bearing mice with VIP receptor peptide antagonists and measured T cell homing, activation, and anti-tumor responses in preclinical murine models of PDAC. Pharmacological inhibition of VIP receptor (VIP-R) signaling using daily subcutaneous injections of peptide antagonists had no discernable toxicity in healthy and tumor-bearing mice. Treatment with VIP-R antagonists in combination with anti-PD-1 checkpoint blockade significantly decreased tumor burden, and improved survival in subcutaneous and orthotopic murine PDAC models. Combination therapy significantly enhanced T cell activation and proliferation and decreased frequencies of Tregs within the TME. Anti-tumor responses were T cell dependent, as the combination therapy failed to improve survival in CD4 or CD8 deficient mice using knock-out strains and antibody depletion. Furthermore, combination therapy significantly increased frequencies of tumor specific T cells (measured with a tetramer reagent) and provided protective immunity against tumor rechallenge. Combination therapy led to significant increases in the infiltration of adoptively transferred GFP+ T cells into PDAC tumors and decreased CXCR4 expression levels on T cells. Encouragingly, peptide-based VIP-R antagonists enhanced the in vitro activation of human T cells isolated from peripheral blood of PDAC patients. Human T cells cultured with VIP-R antagonists had increased proliferation, activation, and decreased proportions of T regs and exhausted T cells co-expressing PD-1, Tim-3 and Lag-3. Taken together, our findings show that VIP is a targetable mechanism of immune escape in PDAC. Inhibiting VIP receptor signaling improves T cell effector properties and synergistically improves anti-tumor responses to checkpoint inhibitors in mouse PDAC models. Additionally, as the VIP sequence is identical between human and mice, and since VIP-R antagonists have similar effects on human and murine T cells in culture, clinical translation is highly feasible. Citation Format: Sruthi Ravindranathan, Passang Tenzin, Jian Ming Li, Rohan Dhamsania, Michael Ware, Mohammad Zaidi, Shuhua Wang, Jingru Zhu, Maria Cardenas, Yuan Liu, Gaurav Joshi, Sanjeev Gumber, Brian Robinson, Anish Sen-Majumdar, Shanmuganathan Chandrakasan, Haydn Kissick, Alan Frey, Susan Thomas, Bassel El-Rayes, Gregory Lesinski, Edmund K. Waller. Inhibiting vasoactive intestinal peptide receptor signaling elicits T cell dependent anti-tumor response of pancreatic ductal adenocarcinoma to immune checkpoint therapy [abstract]. In: Proceedings of the AACR Virtual Special Conference on Pancreatic Cancer; 2021 Sep 29-30. Philadelphia (PA): AACR; Cancer Res 2021;81(22 Suppl):Abstract nr PO-072.
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