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·인용수 44
·2025
Therapy-induced senescent cancer cells contribute to cancer progression by promoting ribophorin 1-dependent PD-L1 upregulation
Hyun Jung Hwang, Donghee Kang, Jisoo Shin, Jonghun Jung, Soyeon Ko, Kyung Hee Jung, Soon‐Sun Hong, Ji Eun Park, Myung Jin Oh, Hyun Joo An, Wenhao Yang, Young‐Gyu Ko, Jong‐Ho Cha, Jae‐Seon Lee
IF 15.7Nature Communications
초록

Conventional chemotherapy- and radiotherapy-induced cancer senescence, which is characterized by poor proliferation, drug resistance, and senescence-associated secretory phenotype, has gained attention as contributing to cancer relapse and the development of an immunosuppressive tumor microenvironment. However, the association between cancer senescence and anti-tumor immunity is not fully understood. Here, we demonstrate that senescent cancer cells increase the level of PD-L1 by promoting its transcription and glycosylation. We identify ribophorin 1 as a key regulator of PD-L1 glycosylation during cancer senescence. Ribophorin 1 depletion reduces this elevated level of PD-L1 through the ER-lysosome-associated degradation pathway, thereby increasing the susceptibility of senescent cancer cells to T-cell-mediated killing. Consistently, ribophorin 1 depletion suppresses tumor growth by decreasing PD-L1 levels and boosting cytotoxic T lymphocyte activity in male mice. Moreover, ribophorin 1-targeted or anti-PD-1 therapy reduces the number of senescent cancer cells in irradiated tumors and suppresses cancer recurrence through the activation of cytotoxic T lymphocytes. These results provide crucial insights into how senescent cancer cells can escape T-cell immunity following cancer treatment and thereby contribute to cancer recurrence. Our findings also highlight the therapeutic promise of targeting senescent cancer cells for cancer treatment.

키워드
CancerDownregulation and upregulationCancer researchAdeptCancer cellMedicineCancer therapyBiologyInternal medicineGene
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article
IF / 인용수
15.7 / 44
게재 연도
2025