Small-molecule MHC-II inducers promote immune detection and anti-cancer immunity via editing cancer metabolism.

Ling Huang,Jun Zhang, Bo Wei, Shuangyang Chen,Sitong Zhu, Weiguan Qi, Xiaoying Pei,Lulu Li,Weiguang Liu,Yuzhi Wang,Xiaojun Xu,Lan-Gui Xie,Liming Chen

Cell chemical biology(2023)

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Abstract
Lack of MHC-II is emerging as a causal factor in cancer immune evasion, and the development of small-molecule MHC-II inducers is an unmet clinical need. Here, we identified three MHC-II inducers, including pristane and its two superior derivatives, that potently induce MHC-II expression in breast cancer cells and effectively inhibit the development of breast cancer. Our data suggest that MHC-II is central in promoting the immune detection of cancer to increase the tumor infiltration of T cells and enhance anti-cancer immunity. By discovering the malonyl/acetyltransferase (MAT) domain in fatty acid synthase (FASN) as the direct binding target of MHC-II inducers, we demonstrate that evasion of immune detection and cancer metabolic reprogramming are directly linked by fatty acid-mediated MHC-II silencing. Collectively, we identified three MHC-II inducers and illustrated that lack of MHC-II caused by hyper-activated fatty acid synthesis to limit immune detection is a potentially widespread mechanism underlying the development of cancer.
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