Statins block cancer's PD-L1 evasion in immunotherapy

Researchers in Japan have uncovered how cancer cells use tiny vesicles to spread the immune-suppressing protein PD-L1, explaining why immunotherapy often fails. A protein called UBL3 directs this process, but common statins can disrupt it, potentially boosting treatment effectiveness. The findings, from patient samples and lab tests, suggest a simple way to improve outcomes for lung cancer patients.

Cancer immunotherapy, which harnesses the immune system to fight tumors, has transformed treatment for some patients through drugs targeting the PD-1/PD-L1 pathway. However, many tumors evade these therapies by releasing small extracellular vesicles (sEVs) loaded with PD-L1, an immunosuppressive protein that dampens immune responses body-wide.

A team led by Professor Kunihiro Tsuchida at Fujita Health University, in collaboration with Tokyo Medical University Hospital and Tokyo Medical University, investigated this mechanism. Published in Scientific Reports in 2025, their study revealed that ubiquitin-like 3 (UBL3) is crucial for sorting PD-L1 into sEVs. This involves a unique post-translational modification via a disulfide bond at cysteine 272 in PD-L1's cytoplasmic region, distinct from standard ubiquitination.

Experiments showed that elevating UBL3 increased PD-L1 packaging in sEVs without altering total cellular PD-L1 levels, while depleting UBL3 reduced it. Strikingly, statins—widely used cholesterol-lowering drugs—interfered with UBL3 modification at low, clinically relevant doses, slashing PD-L1 in sEVs without toxicity.

Cancer cells release small extracellular vesicles containing PD-L1, which are thought to reduce the effectiveness of cancer immunotherapy. However, how PD-L1 is sorted into these vesicles has remained unclear.

In non-small cell lung cancer patients with high tumor PD-L1, those on statins had significantly fewer PD-L1-laden sEVs in their blood than non-users. Bioinformatics linked UBL3 and PD-L1 expression to survival in lung cancer.

In the long term, this research may lead to more effective and accessible cancer immunotherapies. It could help more patients benefit from immune checkpoint treatments, improving survival and quality of life in real-world settings.

This discovery highlights a targetable immune escape route, suggesting statins could enhance checkpoint inhibitors affordably, given their safety and availability.

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Illustration of scientists in a lab analyzing T cell and tumor interactions, representing a breakthrough in anti-tumor immunity research.
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Weill Cornell team identifies CD47–TSP-1 signal behind T cell exhaustion; blocking it revives anti-tumor immunity in mice

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Researchers at Weill Cornell Medicine report that tumors exploit a CD47–thrombospondin-1 signal to push T cells into exhaustion, and that interrupting the interaction restores T cell activity and slows tumor growth in mouse models. The study was published on November 17, 2025, in Nature Immunology.

Researchers from MIT and Stanford University have developed multifunctional molecules called AbLecs to block sugar-based immune checkpoints on cancer cells. This approach aims to enhance immunotherapy by allowing immune cells to better target tumors. Early tests in cells and mice show promising results in boosting anti-tumor responses.

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Scientists at Northwestern Medicine have developed an antibody that counters pancreatic cancer's sugar-based disguise, enabling the immune system to attack tumors more effectively. In mouse studies, the therapy slowed tumor growth by restoring immune activity. The team is preparing the antibody for human trials.

Scientists at the University of British Columbia report a method to consistently produce human helper T cells from pluripotent stem cells by carefully adjusting the timing of a developmental signal known as Notch. The work, published in Cell Stem Cell, is positioned as a step toward scalable “off-the-shelf” immune-cell therapies for cancer and other diseases.

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Scientists at the Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai report an experimental CAR T-cell strategy that targets tumor-associated macrophages—the immune cells many tumors use as a protective shield—rather than attacking cancer cells directly. In preclinical mouse models of metastatic ovarian and lung cancer, the approach reshaped the tumor microenvironment and extended survival, with some animals showing complete tumor clearance, according to a study published online January 22 in Cancer Cell.

Researchers at The Rockefeller University and Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center have revealed a hidden spring‑like motion in the T cell receptor that helps trigger immune responses. Observed with cryo‑electron microscopy in a native‑like membrane environment, the mechanism may help explain why some T cell–based immunotherapies succeed while others fall short, and could inform efforts to make such treatments work for more patients.

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