April 28, 2021

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Novel late-stage colorectal cancer treatment proves effective in preclinical models

The low T cells are due to exosomal, immunosuppressive miRNAs that disrupt T cell function and loss of T cells in the tumor environment. Credit: University of Minnesota Medical School
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The low T cells are due to exosomal, immunosuppressive miRNAs that disrupt T cell function and loss of T cells in the tumor environment. Credit: University of Minnesota Medical School

In a recent discovery by University of Minnesota Medical School, researchers uncovered a new way to potentially target and treat late-stage colorectal cancer—a disease that kills more than 50,000 people each year in the United States. The team identified a novel mechanism by which colorectal cancer cells evade an anti-tumor immune response, which helped them develop an exosome-based therapeutic strategy to potentially treat the disease.

"Late-stage patients face enormous challenges with current treatment options. Most of the time, the patient's immune system cannot efficiently fight against tumors, even with the help of the FDA-approved cancer immunotherapies," said Subree Subramanian, Ph.D., an associate professor in the U of M Medical School's Department of Surgery, and a senior author of the study.

In partnership with Xianda Zhao, MD, Ph.D., a postdoctoral fellow in Subramanian's laboratory, the duo set out to investigate how colorectal cancer becomes resistant to available immunotherapies. What they found was recently published in Gastroenterology, including:

"Our studies indicate that disrupting specific immunosuppressive factors in tumor cells helps unleash the to effectively control tumor growth and metastasis in preclinical models with late-stage colorectal cancer," said Subramanian, who is also a member of the Masonic Cancer Center. "Eliminating the immune suppressive effects of those exosomes is now the focus of a new treatment option for patients with this deadly disease."

The behind the modified exosome technology has been protected with assistance from the U of M Technology Commercialization. The team is currently developing clinical-grade exosomes that can be tested in clinical trials for patients with colorectal cancer.

More information: Xianda Zhao et al, Tumor secreted extracellular vesicles regulate T-cell costimulation and can be manipulated to induce tumor specific T-cell responses, Gastroenterology (2021). DOI: 10.1053/j.gastro.2021.04.036

Journal information: Gastroenterology

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