Paul J. Davis
Albany Medical College, USA
Title: Actions of L-thyroxine (T4 ) and Nano-diamino-tetrac (NDAT, Nanotetrac) on PD-L1 in cancer cells
Biography
Biography: Paul J. Davis
Abstract
The PD-1 (programmed death-1)/PD-L1 (PD-ligand 1) checkpoint is a critical regulator of activated T cell-cancer cell interactions, serving to defend tumor cells against host immune destruction. Nano-diamino-tetrac (NDAT; Nanotetrac) is an anticancer/anti-angiogenic agent targeted to the thyroid hormone-tetrac receptor on the extracellular domain of integrin αvβ3. NDAT inhibits the cancer cell PI3-K and MAPK signal transduction pathways that are critical to PD-L1 gene expression. We examined actions in vitro of thyroid hormone (L-thyroxine, T4) and NDAT on PD-L1 mRNA abundance (qPCR) and PD-L1 protein content in human breast cancer (MDA-MB-231) cells and colon carcinoma (HCT116 and HT-29) cells. In MDA-MB-231 cells, a physiological concentration of T4 (10-7 M total; 10-10 M free hormone) stimulated PD-L1 gene expression by 38% and increased PD-L1 protein by 2.7-fold (p<0.05, all changes). NDAT (10-7 M) reduced PD-L1 in T4-exposed cells by 21% (mRNA) and 39% (protein) (p<0.05, all changes). In HCT116 cells, T4 enhanced PD-L1 gene expression by 17% and protein content by 24% (p<0.05). NDAT reduced basal PD-L1 mRNA by 35% and protein by 31% and in T4-treated cells lowered mRNA by 33% and protein by 66%. In HT-29 cells, T4 increased PD-L1 mRNA by 62% and protein by 27%. NDAT lowered basal and T4-stimulated responses in PD-L1 mRNA and protein by 35-40% (p<0.05). Activation of ERK1/2 was involved in T4-induced PD-L1 accumulation. We propose that, by a nongenomic mechanism, endogenous T4 may clinically support activity of the defensive PD-1/PD-L1 checkpoint in tumor cells. NDAT non-immunologically suppresses basal and T4-induced PD-L1 gene expression in cancer cells.
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