IHEM   20887
INSTITUTO DE HISTOLOGIA Y EMBRIOLOGIA DE MENDOZA DR. MARIO H. BURGOS
Unidad Ejecutora - UE
artículos
Título:
The Tn antigen promotes lung tumor growth by fostering immunosuppression and angiogenesis via interaction with Macrophage Galactose-type lectin 2 (MGL2)
Autor/es:
FRIGERIO, SOFÍA; FESTARI, MARÍA FLORENCIA; RODRÍGUEZ-ZRAQUIA, SANTIAGO A.; RABINOVICH, GABRIEL A.; FREIRE, TERESA; DA COSTA, VALERIA ; GARCÍA, PABLO A.; COSTA, MONIQUE; CAGNONI, ALEJANDRO J.; OSINAGA, EDUARDO; VAN VLIET, SANDRA J.; CROCI, DIEGO O.; LANDEIRA, MERCEDES; CUTINE, ANABELA; MARIÑO, KARINA V.
Revista:
CANCER LETTERS
Editorial:
ELSEVIER IRELAND LTD
Referencias:
Lugar: Ireland; Año: 2021 vol. 518 p. 72 - 81
ISSN:
0304-3835
Resumen:
Tn is a tumor-associated carbohydrate antigen that constitutes both a diagnostic tool and an immunotherapeutictarget. It originates from interruption of the mucin O-glycosylation pathway through defects involving, at least inpart, alterations in core-1 synthase activity, which is highly dependent on Cosmc, a folding chaperone. Tn antigenis recognized by the Macrophage Galactose-type Lectin (MGL), a C-type lectin receptor present on dendriticcells and macrophages. Specific interactions between Tn and MGL shape anti-tumoral immune responses byregulating several innate and adaptive immune cell programs. In this work, we generated and characterized avariant of the lung cancer murine cell line LL/2 that expresses Tn by mutation of the Cosmc chaperone gene (Tn+LL/2). We confirmed Tn expression by lectin glycophenotyping and specific anti-Tn antibodies, verified abrogationof T-synthase activity in these cells, and confirmed its recognition by the murine MGL2 receptor. Interestingly,Tn+ LL/2 cells were more aggressive in vivo, resulting in larger and highly vascularized tumors thanthose generated from wild type Tn􀀀 LL/2 cells. In addition, Tn+ tumors exhibited an increase in CD11c+ F4/80+cells with high expression of MGL2, together with an augmented expression of IL-10 in infiltrating CD4+ andCD8+ T cells. Importantly, this immunosuppressive microenvironment was dependent on the presence of MGL2+cells, since depletion of these cells abrogated tumor growth, vascularization and recruitment of IL-10+ T cells.Altogether, our results suggest that expression of Tn in tumor cells and its interaction with MGL2-expressingCD11c+F4/80+ cells promote immunosuppression and angiogenesis, thus favoring tumor progression.