作者
Peng Liu,Liwei Zhao,Jonathan Pol,Sarah Lévesque,Adriana Petrazzuolo,Christina Pfirschke,Camilla Engblom,Steffen Rickelt,Takahiro Yamazaki,Kristina Iribarren,Laura Senovilla,Lucillia Bezu,Erika Vacchelli,Valentina Sica,Andréa Melis,Tiffany Martin,Lin Xia,Heng Yang,Qingqing Li,Jinfeng Chen,Sylvère Durand,Fanny Aprahamian,Déborah Lefevre,Sophie Broutin,Angélo Paci,Amaury Bongers,Véronique Minard-Colin,Éric Tartour,Laurence Zitvogel,Lionel Apétoh,Yuting Ma,Mikaël J. Pittet,Oliver Kepp,Guido Kroemer
摘要
Abstract Immunogenic cell death (ICD) converts dying cancer cells into a therapeutic vaccine and stimulates antitumor immune responses. Here we unravel the results of an unbiased screen identifying high-dose (10 µM) crizotinib as an ICD-inducing tyrosine kinase inhibitor that has exceptional antineoplastic activity when combined with non-ICD inducing chemotherapeutics like cisplatin. The combination of cisplatin and high-dose crizotinib induces ICD in non-small cell lung carcinoma (NSCLC) cells and effectively controls the growth of distinct (transplantable, carcinogen- or oncogene induced) orthotopic NSCLC models. These anticancer effects are linked to increased T lymphocyte infiltration and are abolished by T cell depletion or interferon-γ neutralization. Crizotinib plus cisplatin leads to an increase in the expression of PD-1 and PD-L1 in tumors, coupled to a strong sensitization of NSCLC to immunotherapy with PD-1 antibodies. Hence, a sequential combination treatment consisting in conventional chemotherapy together with crizotinib, followed by immune checkpoint blockade may be active against NSCLC.