Most cases of adult myeloid neoplasms are routinely assumed to be sporadic. Here, we describe an adult familial acute myeloid leukemia (AML) syndrome caused by germline mutations in the DEAD/H-box helicase gene DDX41. DDX41 was also found to be affected by somatic mutations in sporadic cases of myeloid neoplasms as well as in a biallelic fashion in 50% of patients with germline DDX41 mutations. Moreover, corresponding deletions on 5q35.3 present in 6% of cases led to haploinsufficient DDX41 expression. DDX41 lesions caused altered pre-mRNA splicing and RNA processing. DDX41 is exemplary of other RNA helicase genes also affected by somatic mutations, suggesting that they constitute a family of tumor suppressor genes.
Depleting regulatory T cells (T
reg
cells) to counteract immunosuppressive features of the tumor microenvironment (TME) is an attractive strategy for cancer treatment; however, autoimmunity due to systemic impairment of their suppressive function limits its therapeutic potential. Elucidating approaches that specifically disrupt intratumoral T
reg
cells is direly needed for cancer immunotherapy. We found CD36 was selectively up-regulated in intrautumoral T
reg
cells as a central metabolic modulator. CD36 fine-tuned mitochondrial fitness via PPAR-β signaling, programming T
reg
cells to adapt to a lactic acid-enriched TME. Genetic ablation of
Cd36
in T
reg
cells suppressed tumor growth accompanied by a decrease in intratumoral T
reg
cells and enhancement of anti-tumor activity in tumor-infiltrating lymphocytes without disrupting immune homeostasis. Furthermore, CD36 targeting elicited additive anti-tumor responses with anti-PD-1 therapy. Our findings uncover the unexplored metabolic adaptation that orchestrate survival and functions of intratumoral T
reg
cells, and the therapeutic potential of targeting this pathway for reprogramming the TME.
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