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[Preprint]. 2024 Oct 15:2024.10.13.618076. [Version 1] doi: 10.1101/2024.10.13.618076

Targeting ZNF638 activates antiviral immune responses and potentiates immune checkpoint inhibition in glioblastoma

Deepa Seetharam, Jay Chandar, Christian K Ramsoomair, Jelisah F Desgraves, Alexandra Alvarado Medina, Anna Jane Hudson, Ava Amidei, Jesus R Castro, Vaidya Govindarajan, Sarah Wang, Yong Zhang, Adam M Sonabend, Mynor J Mendez Valdez, Dragan Maric, Vasundara Govindarajan, Sarah R Rivas, Victor M Lu, Ritika Tiwari, Nima Sharifi, Emmanuel Thomas, Marcus Alexander, Catherine DeMarino, Kory Johnson, Macarena I De La Fuente, Ruham Alshiekh Nasany, Teresa Maria Rosaria Noviello, Michael E Ivan, Ricardo J Komotar, Antonio Iavarone, Avindra Nath, John Heiss, Michele Ceccarelli, Katherine B Chiappinelli, Maria E Figueroa, Defne Bayik, Ashish H Shah
PMCID: PMC11507686  PMID: 39464150

Abstract

Viral mimicry refers to the activation of innate anti-viral immune responses due to the induction of endogenous retroelement (RE) expression. Viral mimicry has been previously described to augment anti-tumor immune responses and sensitize solid tumors to immunotherapy including colorectal cancer, melanoma, and clear renal cell carcinoma. Here, we found that targeting a novel, master epigenetic regulator, Zinc Finger Protein 638 (ZNF638), induces viral mimicry in glioblastoma (GBM) preclinical models and potentiates immune checkpoint inhibition (ICI). ZNF638 recruits the HUSH complex, which precipitates repressive H3K9me3 marks on endogenous REs. In GBM, ZNF638 is associated with marked locoregional immunosuppressive transcriptional signatures, reduced endogenous RE expression and poor immune cell infiltration (CD8 + T-cells, dendritic cells). ZNF638 knockdown decreased H3K9-trimethylation, increased cytosolic dsRNA and activated intracellular dsRNA-signaling cascades (RIG-I, MDA5 and IRF3). Furthermore, ZNF638 knockdown upregulated antiviral immune programs and significantly increased PD-L1 immune checkpoint expression in patient-derived GBM neurospheres and diverse murine models. Importantly, targeting ZNF638 sensitized mice to ICI in syngeneic murine orthotopic models through innate interferon signaling. This response was recapitulated in recurrent GBM (rGBM) samples with radiographic responses to checkpoint inhibition with widely increased expression of dsRNA, PD-L1 and perivascular CD8 cell infiltration, suggesting dsRNA-signaling may mediate response to immunotherapy. Finally, we showed that low ZNF638 expression was a biomarker of clinical response to ICI and improved survival in rGBM patients and melanoma patients. Our findings suggest that ZNF638 could serve as a target to potentiate immunotherapy in gliomas.

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