Combined use of cisplatin plus natural killer cells overcomes immunoresistance of cisplatin resistant ovarian cancer.

2021 
Standard chemotherapy for ovarian cancers is often abrogated by drug resistance. Specifically, resistance to cisplatin is a major clinical obstacle to successful treatment of ovarian cancers. The aim of this study was to develop a therapeutic strategy using natural killer (NK) cells to treat cisplatin-resistant ovarian cancers. First, we compared the responses of ovarian cancer cell line A2780 and its cisplatin-resistant counterpart, A2780cis, to treatment with cisplatin plus NK92MI cells. Although combined treatment induces apoptosis of ovarian cancer cells via ROS-dependent and -independent mechanisms, A2780cis were resistant to NK92MI cell-mediated cytotoxicity. We found that A2780cis cells showed markedly higher expression of immune checkpoint protein, PD-L1, than the parental cells. Although pretreatment of A2780cis cells with cisplatin stimulated further expression of PD-L1, it also increased expression of ULBP ligands, which are activating receptors on NK92MI cells, both in vitro and in vivo. These findings suggest that combined use of cisplatin plus NK cell-mediated immunotherapy could overcome immunoresistance of chemoresistant ovarian cancers.
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