In a groundbreaking study published in the June 2026 issue of Oncotarget, researchers from the Dana-Farber Cancer Institute have unveiled a pivotal role of the protein acyltransferase DHHC3 in modulating melanoma growth through its regulation of anti-tumor immunity. This research sheds new light on the complex interplay between tumor biology and the immune system, emphasizing how tumor cells manipulate immune responses to sustain their progression.
Melanoma represents a particularly aggressive skin cancer subtype with a notorious ability to evade immune surveillance. While immunotherapy has revolutionized treatment paradigms by harnessing the body’s immune defenses, many tumors evolve mechanisms to subvert immune attack, rendering therapy ineffective. The study focuses on elucidating the molecular underpinnings of immune evasion, with DHHC3 emerging as a critical player influencing melanoma’s immunological landscape.
DHHC3 functions as a palmitoyltransferase, an enzyme catalyzing the attachment of palmitoyl groups to target proteins, thus affecting their localization, stability, and function. Additionally, DHHC3 is known to moderate oxidative stress by maintaining cellular redox homeostasis. Prior studies hinted at correlations between elevated DHHC3 expression and poor clinical outcomes across several cancer types, prompting investigation into its specific role within melanoma microenvironments.
Utilizing CRISPR-Cas9 gene editing, the team ablated DHHC3 expression in the murine B16F10 melanoma cell line, creating a model to observe resultant cellular and immunological changes. Loss of DHHC3 induced pronounced oxidative stress within tumor cells, evidenced by an upregulation of TXNIP, a potent mediator of reactive oxygen species. This heightened oxidative stress triggered senescence-associated pathways, marked by increased expression of classical senescence markers, indicating that DHHC3 ablation compromises tumor cell homeostasis.
Crucially, when these DHHC3-deficient melanoma cells were implanted into immunocompetent mice, tumor growth was substantially diminished compared to controls. Interestingly, this growth suppression was absent in immunodeficient mice lacking functional immune systems, pointing toward an immune-dependent mechanism underlying the observed tumor inhibition. The results suggest that DHHC3 enables melanoma cells to escape immune recognition, and its loss reinvigorates host anti-tumor immunity.
Immune profiling of the tumor microenvironment revealed significant shifts in immune cell populations following DHHC3 knockout. Tumors exhibited marked infiltration by natural killer (NK) cells, M1-polarized macrophages associated with pro-inflammatory and anti-tumor functions, as well as CD4+ and CD8+ T lymphocytes, all instrumental in orchestrating effective immune responses against malignancies. Conversely, populations of immunosuppressive M2 macrophages and myeloid-derived suppressor cells (MDSCs), which typically promote tumor progression, were reduced.
Despite these profound changes in primary tumor growth dynamics, pulmonary metastases did not show significant differences between DHHC3-expressing and knockout conditions in either immunocompetent or immunodeficient mice. Additionally, melanoma cell proliferation rates measured under traditional culture conditions remained unchanged, underscoring that DHHC3’s impact is not due to intrinsic growth alterations but rather through modulating immune interactions in vivo.
The researchers propose a model whereby increased oxidative stress and cellular senescence triggered by DHHC3 deficiency elicit a senescence-associated secretory phenotype (SASP). This SASP acts as a molecular beacon, recruiting and activating anti-tumor immune effector cells into the tumor microenvironment, enhancing immune-mediated tumor clearance. Such a mechanism highlights the dual role of DHHC3 in both cellular homeostasis and immune regulation within melanoma.
These findings illuminate DHHC3 as a multifunctional regulator that melanoma cells exploit to evade immune surveillance, thereby facilitating tumor survival and expansion. Targeting DHHC3 enzymatic activity or its downstream signaling pathways may represent an innovative therapeutic avenue to bolster anti-melanoma immunity, particularly in tumors refractory to existing immunotherapies.
Beyond its immediate implications for melanoma treatment, the study also provides valuable insight into the intricate crosstalk between oxidative stress, cellular senescence, and immune modulation. It sets the stage for future investigations aimed at exploiting metabolic and immunological vulnerabilities in cancer.
In conclusion, the research narrates a compelling story positioning DHHC3 as a central node linking tumor-intrinsic oxidative regulation to extrinsic immune environment alterations. The strategic targeting of DHHC3 could enhance the efficacy of immunotherapeutic regimens and mitigate immune escape, offering renewed hope for melanoma patients facing poor prognoses.
This study stands as a testament to the power of combining advanced gene editing techniques with robust in vivo models to unravel cancer’s evasive tactics, paving the way for next-generation immunomodulatory therapies.
Subject of Research: Cells
Article Title: DHHC3 interferes with antitumor immunity in melanoma cells
News Publication Date: June 8, 2026
Web References: https://doi.org/10.18632/oncotarget.28880
Image Credits: Copyright: © 2026 Sharma et al. (Distributed under CC BY 4.0 license)
Keywords: cancer, oxidative stress, DHHC3, anti-cancer immunity, palmitoylation, melanoma

