HSF1 Inhibits Antitumor Immune Activity in Breast Cancer by Suppressing CCL5 to Block CD8+ T-cell Recruitment

Author:

Jacobs Curteisha1ORCID,Shah Sakhi1ORCID,Lu Wen-Cheng1ORCID,Ray Haimanti1ORCID,Wang John1ORCID,Hockaden Natasha1ORCID,Sandusky George23ORCID,Nephew Kenneth P.124ORCID,Lu Xin25ORCID,Cao Sha26ORCID,Carpenter Richard L.127ORCID

Affiliation:

1. 1Medical Sciences, Indiana University School of Medicine, Bloomington, Indiana.

2. 2Melvin and Bren Simon Comprehensive Cancer Center, Indiana University, Indianapolis, Indiana.

3. 3Department of Pathology & Laboratory Medicine, Indiana University School of Medicine, Indianapolis, Indiana.

4. 4Department of Anatomy, Cell Biology & Physiology, Indiana University, Indianapolis, Indiana.

5. 5Department of Biological Sciences, University of Notre Dame, Notre Dame, Indiana.

6. 6Department of Biostatistics and Health Data Science, Indiana University School of Medicine, Indianapolis, Indiana.

7. 7Department of Biochemistry and Molecular Biology, Medical Sciences, Indiana University School of Medicine, Indianapolis, Indiana.

Abstract

Abstract Heat shock factor 1 (HSF1) is a stress-responsive transcription factor that promotes cancer cell malignancy. To provide a better understanding of the biological processes regulated by HSF1, here we developed an HSF1 activity signature (HAS) and found that it was negatively associated with antitumor immune cells in breast tumors. Knockdown of HSF1 decreased breast tumor size and caused an influx of several antitumor immune cells, most notably CD8+ T cells. Depletion of CD8+ T cells rescued the reduction in growth of HSF1-deficient tumors, suggesting HSF1 prevents CD8+ T-cell influx to avoid immune-mediated tumor killing. HSF1 suppressed expression of CCL5, a chemokine for CD8+ T cells, and upregulation of CCL5 upon HSF1 loss significantly contributed to the recruitment of CD8+ T cells. These findings indicate that HSF1 suppresses antitumor immune activity by reducing CCL5 to limit CD8+ T-cell homing to breast tumors and prevent immune-mediated destruction, which has implications for the lack of success of immune modulatory therapies in breast cancer. Significance: The stress-responsive transcription factor HSF1 reduces CD8+ T-cell infiltration in breast tumors to prevent immune-mediated killing, indicating that cellular stress responses affect tumor-immune interactions and that targeting HSF1 could improve immunotherapies.

Funder

National Cancer Institute

Indiana Clinical and Translational Sciences Institute

Catherine Peachey Fund

Melvin and Bren Simon Cancer Center, Indiana University

Stand Up To Cancer

Publisher

American Association for Cancer Research (AACR)

Subject

Cancer Research,Oncology

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