PD-L1 sustains chronic, cancer cell-intrinsic responses to type I interferon, enhancing resistance to DNA damage

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Abstract

Programmed death ligand 1 (PD-L1), an immune-checkpoint protein expressed on cancer cells, also functions independently of the immune system. We found that PD-L1 inhibits the killing of cancer cells in response to DNA damage in an immune-independent manner by suppressing their acute response to type I interferon (IFN; IFN-I). In addition, PD-L1 plays a critical role in sustaining high levels of constitutive expression in cancer cells of a subset of IFNinduced genes, the IFN-related DNA damage resistance signature (IRDS) which, paradoxically, protects cancer cells. The cyclic GMPAMP synthase-stimulator of the IFN genes (cGAS-STING) pathway is constitutively activated in a subset of cancer cells in the presence of high levels of PD-L1, thus leading to a constitutive, low level of IFN-β expression, which in turn increases IRDS expression. The constitutive low level of IFN-β expression is critical for the survival of cancer cells addicted to self-produced IFN-β. Our study reveals immune-independent functions of PD-L1 that inhibit cytotoxic acute responses to IFN-I and promote protective IRDS expression by supporting protective chronic IFN-I responses, both of which enhance the resistance of cancer cells to DNA damage.

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Cheon, H. J., Holvey-Bates, E. G., McGrail, D. J., & Stark, G. R. (2021). PD-L1 sustains chronic, cancer cell-intrinsic responses to type I interferon, enhancing resistance to DNA damage. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America, 118(47). https://doi.org/10.1073/pnas.2112258118

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