Investigator

Rudiyanto Gunawan

Associate Professor · State University of New York at Buffalo, Department of Chemical and Biological Engineering

RGRudiyanto Gunawan
Papers(1)
Metabolic adaptation …
Collaborators(10)
Sarah WarrenSebastiano BattagliaShashikant LeleSpencer RosarioSteven P. FlingSudharshan RaviTakemasa TsujiVan Anh NguyenVasanta PutluriWenjuan Zha
Institutions(6)
State University Of N…Nanostring Technologi…Roswell Park Comprehe…Fred Hutch Cancer Cen…The University of Chi…Baylor College Of Med…

Papers

Metabolic adaptation of ovarian tumors in patients treated with an IDO1 inhibitor constrains antitumor immune responses

To uncover underlying mechanisms associated with failure of indoleamine 2,3-dioxygenase 1 (IDO1) blockade in clinical trials, we conducted a pilot, window-of-opportunity clinical study in 17 patients with newly diagnosed advanced high-grade serous ovarian cancer before their standard tumor debulking surgery. Patients were treated with the IDO1 inhibitor epacadostat, and immunologic, transcriptomic, and metabolomic characterization of the tumor microenvironment was undertaken in baseline and posttreatment tumor biopsies. IDO1 inhibition resulted in efficient blockade of the kynurenine pathway of tryptophan degradation and was accompanied by a metabolic adaptation that shunted tryptophan catabolism toward the serotonin pathway. This resulted in elevated nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide (NAD + ), which reduced T cell proliferation and function. Because NAD + metabolites could be ligands for purinergic receptors, we investigated the impact of blocking purinergic receptors in the presence or absence of NAD + on T cell proliferation and function in our mouse model. We demonstrated that A2a and A2b purinergic receptor antagonists, SCH58261 or PSB1115, respectively, rescued NAD + -mediated suppression of T cell proliferation and function. Combining IDO1 inhibition and A2a/A2b receptor blockade improved survival and boosted the antitumor immune signature in mice with IDO1 overexpressing ovarian cancer. These findings elucidate the downstream adaptive metabolic consequences of IDO1 blockade in ovarian cancers that may undermine antitumor T cell responses in the tumor microenvironment.

114Works
1Papers
25Collaborators

Positions

2018–

Associate Professor

State University of New York at Buffalo · Department of Chemical and Biological Engineering

2011–

Assistant Professor

ETH Zürich · Chemistry and Applied Biosciences

2006–

Assistant Professor

National University of Singapore · Chemical and Biomolecular Engineering

2003–

Postdoctoral Fellow

University of California Santa Barbara · Chemical Engineering

Education

2003

University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign · Chemical and Biomolecular Engineering

2000

MSc

University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign · Chemical and Biomolecular Engineering

1998

BSc

University of Wisconsin Madison · Chemical Engineering