Neuroendocrine Regulation of Stress-Induced T Cell Dysfunction during Lung Cancer Immunosurveillance via the Kisspeptin/GPR54 Signaling Pathway

Su Zhang, Fangfei Yu, Anran Che, Binghe Tan, Chenshen Huang, Yuxue Chen, Xiaohong Liu, Qi Huang, Wenying Zhang, Chengbin Ma, Min Qian, Mingyao Liu*, Juliang Qin*, Bing Du*

*Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

24 Scopus citations

Abstract

Emerging evidence suggests that physiological distress is highly correlated with cancer incidence and mortality. However, the mechanisms underlying psychological challenges-mediated tumor immune evasion are not systematically explored. Here, it is demonstrated that acute restraint (AR) increases the level of the plasma neuropeptide hormones, kisspeptin, and the expression levels of its receptor, Gpr54, in the hypothalamus, splenic and tumor-infiltrating T cells, suggesting a correlation between the neuroendocrine system and tumor microenvironment. Accordingly, administration of kisspeptin-10 significantly impairs T cell function, whereas knockout of Gpr54 in T cells inhibits lung tumor progression by suppressing T cell dysfunction and exhaustion with or without AR. In addition, Gpr54 defective OT-1 T cells show superior antitumor activity against OVA peptide-positive tumors. Mechanistically, ERK5-mediated NR4A1 activation is found to be essential for kisspeptin/GPR54-facilitated T cell dysfunction. Meanwhile, pharmacological inhibition of ERK5 signaling by XMD8-92 significantly reduces the tumor growth by enhancing CD8+ T cell antitumor function. Furthermore, depletion of GPR54 or ERK5 by CRISPR/Cas9 in CAR T cells intensifies the antitumor responses to both PSMA+ and CD19+ tumor cells, while eliminating T cell exhaustion. Taken together, these results indicate that kisspeptin/GPR54 signaling plays a nonredundant role in the stress-induced tumor immune evasion.

Original languageEnglish
Article number2104132
JournalAdvanced Science
Volume9
Issue number13
DOIs
StatePublished - 5 May 2022

Keywords

  • ERK5
  • GPR54
  • T cell exhaustion
  • kisspeptin
  • stress

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