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Lung Cancer-Derived Galectin-1 Mediates Dendritic Cell Anergy through Inhibitor of DNA Binding 3/IL-10 Signaling Pathway

Authors :
Ya Ling Hsu
Shau Ku Huang
Shah Hwa Chou
Ying‑Ming Tsai
Jen‑Yu Hung
Yuh-Jyh Jong
Chih Jen Yang
Da‑En Cheng
Chih Hsing Hung
Po-Lin Kuo
Ming‑Shyan Huang
Source :
The Journal of Immunology. 186:1521-1530
Publication Year :
2011
Publisher :
The American Association of Immunologists, 2011.

Abstract

Lung cancer, one of the leading causes of death worldwide, is often associated with a state of immune suppression, but the molecular and functional basis remains enigmatic. Evidence is provided in this paper supporting the role of lung cancer-derived soluble lectin, galectin-1, as a culprit in dendritic cell (DC) anergy. We have shown that galectin-1 is highly expressed in lung cancer cell lines, together with the serum and surgical samples from lung cancer patients. Functionally, lung cancer-derived galectin-1 has been shown to alter the phenotypes of monocyte-derived DCs (MdDCs) and impair alloreactive T cell response, concomitant with the increase of CD4+CD25+FOXP3+ regulatory T cells. The regulatory effect of galectin-1 is mediated, in part, through its ability to induce, in an Id3 (inhibitor of DNA binding 3)-dependent manner, the expression of IL-10 in monocytes and MdDCs. This effect is inhibited by the addition of lactose, which normalizes the phenotypic and functional alterations seen in MdDCs. Of note, significant upregulation of IL-10 was seen in tumor-infiltrating CD11c+ DCs in human lung cancer samples. This was also noted in mice transplanted with lung cancer cells, but not in those receiving tumor cells with galectin-1 knockdown. Furthermore, a significant reduction was noted in lung cancer incidence and in the levels of IL-10–expressing, tumor-infiltrating DCs, in mice receiving galectin-1–silenced tumor cells. These results thus suggest that the galectin-1/IL-10 functional axis may be crucial in lung cancer-mediated immune suppression, and that galectin-1 may serve as a target in the development of lung cancer immunotherapy.

Details

ISSN :
15506606 and 00221767
Volume :
186
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
The Journal of Immunology
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....64f0a36cf29b57c0b286f1f3a6d4054a