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Lysosomal processing of sulfatide analogs alters target NKT cell specificity and immune responses in cancer

Authors :
Nishio, Kumiko
Camara, Lise PasqueKaddy
DiSapio, Julia
Hsu, Kevin S.
Kato, Shingo
Bloom, Anja
Richardson, Stewart K.
Welsh, Joshua A.
Jiang, Tianbo
Jones, Jennifer C.
Cardell, Susanna
Watarai, Hiroshi
Terabe, Masaki
Olkhanud, Purevdorj B.
Howell, Amy R.
Berzofsky, Jay A.
Source :
Journal of Clinical Investigation. February 15, 2024, Vol. 134 Issue 4
Publication Year :
2024

Abstract

In a structure-function study of sulfatides that typically stimulate type II NKT cells, we made an unexpected discovery. We compared analogs with sphingosine or phytosphingosine chains and 24-carbon acyl chains with 0-1-2 double bonds (C or pC24:0, 24:1, or 24:2). C24:1 and C24:2 sulfatide presented by the CD1d monomer on plastic stimulated type II, not type I, NKT cell hybridomas, as expected. Unexpectedly, when presented by bone marrow- derived DCs (BMDCs), C24:2 reversed specificity to stimulate type I, not type II, NKT cell hybridomas, mimicking the corresponding [beta]-galactosylceramide ([beta]GalCer) without sulfate. C24:2 induced IFN-[gamma]-dependent immunoprotection against CT26 colon cancer lung metastases, skewed the cytokine profile, and activated conventional DC subset 1 cells (cDC1s). This was abrogated by blocking lysosomal processing with bafilomycin A1, or by sulfite blocking of arylsulfatase or deletion of this enyzme that cleaves off sulfate. Thus, C24:2 was unexpectedly processed in BMDCs from a type II to a type I NKT cell- stimulating ligand, promoting tumor immunity. We believe this is the first discovery showing that antigen processing of glycosylceramides alters the specificity for the target cell, reversing the glycolipid's function from stimulating type II NKT cells to stimulating type I NKT cells, thereby introducing protective functional activity in cancer. We also believe our study uncovers a new role for antigen processing that does not involve MHC loading but rather alteration of which type of cell is responding.<br />Introduction The recent clinical success of checkpoint inhibitors, which manipulate T cell function and extend patient survival in many cases, provides strong motivation to treat cancer by modulating immunity. However, [...]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
00219738
Volume :
134
Issue :
4
Database :
Gale General OneFile
Journal :
Journal of Clinical Investigation
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
edsgcl.786063942
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1172/JCI165281