1. Academic Validation
  2. Regulatory T-cell sensing of extracellular ATP via P2RX7 promotes their accumulation and suppression and drives lung tumor growth

Regulatory T-cell sensing of extracellular ATP via P2RX7 promotes their accumulation and suppression and drives lung tumor growth

  • Cancer Immunol Res. 2026 Jan 21:10.1158/2326-6066.CIR-25-0567. doi: 10.1158/2326-6066.CIR-25-0567.
Igor Santiago-Carvalho 1 Ronaldo Francisco Jr 2 Bruna de Gois Macedo 3 Caio Loureiro Salgado 1 Carly R Stoll 1 Samantha Shao 1 Angad Beniwal 1 Tina Kwok 1 Alma Banuelos 3 Marcos Pinheiro Cione 1 Emily White 1 Tyler M Johnston 1 Chloe Liliana Leff 1 Ildefonso Silva-Junior 1 Fabio Carvalho de Souza 1 Win Thant 4 Prita Pandya 5 Maria Regina D'Imperio Lima 6 Sebastian Fernandez-Bussy 7 David Abia-Trujillo 5 Linh H Vu 8 Nhan L Tran 9 Bryan C Husta 5 John A Copland 7 Fotini Gounari 1 Verline Justilien 5 Jessica Naomi Lancaster 1 Henrique Borges da Silva 1
Affiliations

Affiliations

  • 1 Mayo Clinic Phoenix, Arizona United States.
  • 2 Brigham and Women's Hospital Boston, Massachusetts United States.
  • 3 Mayo Clinic Scottsdale, Arizona United States.
  • 4 Massachusetts General Hospital Boston United States.
  • 5 Mayo Clinic Jacksonville, Florida United States.
  • 6 Universidade de São Paulo Sao Paulo, Sao Paulo Brazil.
  • 7 Mayo Clinic Jacksonville, FL United States.
  • 8 Mayo Clinic United States.
  • 9 Mayo Clinic Scottsdale, AZ United States.
Abstract

Lung Cancer is the leading cause of cancer-related deaths worldwide and, despite advances in treatment, immune suppression remains an obstacle to effective therapy. Effector CD4+ T cells (CD4+ Teffs) are critical for antitumor immunity, but their function is often inhibited by regulatory T cells (Tregs), which accumulate in lung tumors and mediate suppressive functions through multiple mechanisms. This suppression leads to tumor progression and poor patient outcomes. However, the mechanisms underlying Treg-mediated suppression are not fully understood. Herein, we identify the extracellular ATP receptor P2RX7 as a key regulator of Treg function in lung tumors. In a murine lung Cancer model induced by Lewis lung carcinoma cells, we found that P2RX7 enhanced the suppressive capacity of tumor-infiltrating Tregs, promoting tumor growth. In T cell-specific P2RX7-KO mice, reduced Treg infiltration was accompanied by increased CD4+ Teff accumulation and improved tumor control. Treg-specific P2RX7-KO mice exhibited reduced tumor growth, confirming a Treg-intrinsic role of P2RX7. Suppression assays revealed that tumor-infiltrating wild-type Tregs had greater suppressive activity compared to P2RX7-KO Tregs, which failed to inhibit type 1 and Tfh-like responses. This was associated with increased tumor-specific IgG production by lung B cells in P2RX7-KO mice. We also observed that wild-type Tregs expressed higher levels of the immunosuppressive molecule CTLA-4 when compared to P2RX7-KO Tregs. Thus, we conclude that P2RX7 expression on Tregs is essential for their suppressive function in lung Cancer and targeting of P2RX7 may constitute a strategy to improve lung Cancer treatment by alleviating Treg-mediated immune suppression.

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