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An Asia-specific variant of human IgG1 represses colorectal tumorigenesis by shaping the tumor microenvironment

Authors :
Bing Yang
Zhen Zhang
Xiangjun Chen
Xu-Yan Wang
Shishang Qin
Liaoqi Du
Changjiang Yang
Liyu Zhu
Wenbo Sun
Yongjie Zhu
Qinwen Zheng
Shidong Zhao
Quan Wang
Long Zhao
Yilin Lin
Jinghe Huang
Fan Wu
Lu Lu
Fei Wang
Wenjie Zheng
Xiao-Hua Zhou
Xiaozhen Zhao
Ziye Wang
Sun Xiao-Lin
Yingjiang Ye
Shan Wang
Zhanguo Li
Hai Qi
Zemin Zhang
Dong-Ming Kuang
Lei Zhang
Zhanlong Shen
Wanli Liu
Source :
The Journal of Clinical Investigation, Vol 132, Iss 6 (2022)
Publication Year :
2022
Publisher :
American Society for Clinical Investigation, 2022.

Abstract

Emerging studies have focused on ways to treat cancers by modulating T cell activation. However, whether B cell receptor signaling in the tumor microenvironment (TME) can be harnessed for immunotherapy is unclear. Here, we report that an Asia-specific variant of human IgG1 containing a Gly396 to Arg396 substitution (hIgG1-G396R) conferred improved survival of patients with colorectal cancer (CRC). Mice with knockin of the murine functional homolog mIgG2c-G400R recapitulated the alleviated tumorigenesis and progression in murine colon carcinoma models. Immune profiling of the TME revealed broad mobilizations of IgG1+ plasma cells, CD8+ T cells, CD103+ DCs, and active tertiary lymphoid structure formation, suggesting an effective antitumor microenvironment in hIgG1-G396R CRC patients. Mechanistically, this variant potentiated tumor-associated antigen–specific (TAA-specific) plasma cell differentiation and thus antibody production. These elevated TAA-specific IgG2c antibodies in turn efficiently boosted the antibody-dependent tumor cell phagocytosis and TAA presentation to effector CD8+ T cells. Notably, adoptive transfer of TAA-specific class-switched memory B cells harboring this variant exhibited therapeutic efficacy in murine tumor models, indicating their clinical potential. All these results prompted a prospective investigation of hIgG1-G396R in patients with CRC as a biomarker for clinical prognosis and demonstrated that manipulating the functionality of IgG1+ memory B cells in tumors could improve immunotherapy outcomes.

Subjects

Subjects :
Immunology
Oncology
Medicine

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
15588238
Volume :
132
Issue :
6
Database :
Directory of Open Access Journals
Journal :
The Journal of Clinical Investigation
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
edsdoj.41a1a865d6e485499d5512428741ed4
Document Type :
article
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1172/JCI153454