1. Carcinomas assemble a filamentous CXCL12-keratin-19 coating that suppresses T cell-mediated immune attack.
- Author
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Wang Z, Moresco P, Yan R, Li J, Gao Y, Biasci D, Yao M, Pearson J, Hechtman JF, Janowitz T, Zaidi RM, Weiss MJ, and Fearon DT
- Subjects
- Animals, Breast Neoplasms, Carcinoma pathology, Cell Line, Tumor, Chemokine CXCL12 chemistry, Female, Humans, Keratin-19 chemistry, Male, Mice, Microsatellite Repeats, Pancreatic Neoplasms, Protein Binding, Protein Multimerization, Pancreatic Neoplasms, Carcinoma etiology, Carcinoma metabolism, Chemokine CXCL12 metabolism, Cytotoxicity, Immunologic, Keratin-19 metabolism, T-Lymphocytes immunology, T-Lymphocytes metabolism
- Abstract
Cancer immunotherapy frequently fails because most carcinomas have few T cells, suggesting that cancers can suppress T cell infiltration. Here, we show that cancer cells of human pancreatic ductal adenocarcinoma (PDA), colorectal cancer, and breast cancer are coated with transglutaminase-2 (TGM2)-dependent covalent CXCL12-keratin-19 (KRT19) heterodimers that are organized as filamentous networks. Since a dimeric form of CXCL12 suppresses the motility of human T cells, we determined whether this polymeric CXCL12-KRT19 coating mediated T cell exclusion. Mouse tumors containing control PDA cells exhibited the CXCL12-KRT19 coating, excluded T cells, and did not respond to treatment with anti-PD-1 antibody. Tumors containing PDA cells not expressing either KRT19 or TGM2 lacked the CXCL12-KRT19 coating, were infiltrated with activated CD8
+ T cells, and growth was suppressed with anti-PD-1 antibody treatment. Thus, carcinomas assemble a CXCL12-KRT19 coating to evade cancer immune attack., Competing Interests: The authors declare no competing interest. D.T.F. and one of the reviewers, M.M., were co-authors on V.P. Balachandran et al. Nature 551, 512–516 (2017), but there was no direct collaboration., (Copyright © 2022 the Author(s). Published by PNAS.)- Published
- 2022
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