New Therapy Blocks Glioblastoma's Immune Hijack

Mass General Brigham

Q: How would you summarize your study for a lay audience?

Our study investigated the role of astrocytes, an abundant cell type in the brain, in regulating an immune response against glioblastoma (GBM)—a highly aggressive brain cancer. We found a subset of astrocytes that limits the immune response and can be targeted with therapeutics.

Q: What question were you investigating?

GBM is a brain cancer that has remained untreatable for decades. Immunotherapies that have worked in other cancers are ineffective in GBM, potentially due to the local suppression of immune responses in the tumor microenvironment. Astrocytes are abundant cells of the central immune system that regulate inflammation in multiple diseases. Here, we examined how their role in the immune response could provide insights into effectively treating GBM.

Q: What methods or approach did you use?

We investigated astrocyte subsets through a combination of high-resolution sequencing methods of clinical samples and mouse models. We also used multiplex microscopy, in vivo genetic deletion and in vitro model systems. Additionally, we used therapeutic oncolytic viruses, which were engineered to express a blocking antibody in situ.

Q: What did you find?

We identified a novel mechanism whereby GBM cells exploit astrocytes to evade immune responses. Specifically, we:

  • Found a group of astrocytes specialized in killing T cells—white blood cells essential to the immune response. Deactivating this group of astrocytes boosts T cell activity, remodels the area around the tumor, and enhances the protective immune responses against the tumor while extending survival in mice.
  • Demonstrated that the tumor cells release an inflammatory molecule called IL-11 that further activates these T-cell killing astrocytes, leading to shorter survival and faster cancer recurrence.
  • Designed a novel therapeutic approach to target this pathway by engineering a virus to produce an antibody that suppress this immunosuppressive mechanism.

Q: What are the implications?

Our study highlights an astrocyte-driven mechanism used by GBM to escape protective immune responses. These findings could guide novel immunotherapies for GBM.

Q: What are the next steps?

Since we found that GBM exploits astrocytes by producing IL-11, our next steps are to investigate how IL-11 affects other cell types in the GBM tumor microenvironment and brain metastases, including investigating broader effects of IL-11 on the successful mounting of immune responses.

Authorship: In addition to Quintana and Faust Akl, Mass General Brigham authors include Brian M. Andersen, Zhaorong Li, Federico Giovannoni, Liliana M. Sanmarco, Michael Kilian, Joseph M. Rone, Hong-Gyun Lee, Gavin Piester, Jessica E. Kenison, Joon-Hyuk Lee, Tomer Illouz, Carolina M. Polonio, Léna Srun, Jazmin Martinez, Elizabeth N. Chung, Anton Schüle, Agustin Plasencia, Lucinda Li, Kylynne Ferrara, Iain C. Clark, Michael A. Wheeler, Keith L. Ligon, and E. Antonio Chiocca.

Paper cited: Faust Akl C et al. "Glioblastoma-instructed astrocytes suppress tumor-specific T-cell immunity." Nature. DOI [AM1] :

Funding: This work was supported by the National Institutes of Health (NS102807, ES02530, ES029136, AI126880), the National MS Society (RG4111A1 and JF2161-A), the American Cancer Society (RSG-14-198-01-LIB) and the International Progressive MS Alliance (PA-1604-08459).

Disclosures: Authors Craig A. Strathdee, Lucinda Lind Christophe Quéva were employees of Oncorus Inc. during the performance of some of these studies.

/Public Release. This material from the originating organization/author(s) might be of the point-in-time nature, and edited for clarity, style and length. Mirage.News does not take institutional positions or sides, and all views, positions, and conclusions expressed herein are solely those of the author(s).View in full here.