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Sodium stibogluconate and CD47-SIRPa blockade overcome resistance of anti-CD20–opsonized B cells to neutrophil killing

Authors :
Rees, Dieke J. van
Brinkhaus, Maximilian
Klein, Bart
Verkuijlen, Paul
Tool, Anton T.J.
Schornagel, Karin
Treffers, Louise W.
Houdt, Michel van
Kater, Arnon P.
Vidarsson, Gestur
Gennery, Andrew R.
Kuijpers, Taco W.
Bruggen, Robin van
Matlung, Hanke L.
Berg, Timo K. van den
Rees, Dieke J. van
Brinkhaus, Maximilian
Klein, Bart
Verkuijlen, Paul
Tool, Anton T.J.
Schornagel, Karin
Treffers, Louise W.
Houdt, Michel van
Kater, Arnon P.
Vidarsson, Gestur
Gennery, Andrew R.
Kuijpers, Taco W.
Bruggen, Robin van
Matlung, Hanke L.
Berg, Timo K. van den
Source :
Blood advances vol.6 (2022) date: 2022-04-11 nr.7 p.2156–2166
Publication Year :
2022

Abstract

Anti-CD20 antibodies such as rituximab are broadly used to treat B-cell malignancies. These antibodies can induce various effector functions, including immune cell-mediated antibody-dependent cellular cytotoxicity (ADCC). Neutrophils can induce ADCC toward solid cancer cells by trogoptosis, a cytotoxic mechanism known to be dependent on trogocytosis. However, neutrophils seem to be incapable of killing rituximab-opsonized B-cell lymphoma cells. Nevertheless, neutrophils do trogocytose rituximab-opsonized B-cell lymphoma cells, but this only reduces CD20 surface expression and is thought to render tumor cells therapeutically resistant to further rituximab-dependent destruction. Here, we demonstrate that resistance of B-cell lymphoma cells toward neutrophil killing can be overcome by a combination of CD47-SIRPa checkpoint blockade and sodium stibogluconate (SSG), an anti-leishmaniasis drug and documented inhibitor of the tyrosine phosphatase SHP-1. SSG enhanced neutrophil-mediated ADCC of solid tumor cells but enabled trogoptotic killing of B-cell lymphoma cells by turning trogocytosis from a mechanism that contributes to resistance into a cytotoxic anti-cancer mechanism. Tumor cell killing in the presence of SSG required both antibody opsonization of the target cells and disruption of CD47-SIRPa interactions. These results provide a more detailed understanding of the role of neutrophil trogocytosis in antibody-mediated destruction of B cells and clues on how to further optimize antibody therapy of B-cell malignancies.

Details

Database :
OAIster
Journal :
Blood advances vol.6 (2022) date: 2022-04-11 nr.7 p.2156–2166
Notes :
DOI: 10.1182/bloodadvances.2021005367, English
Publication Type :
Electronic Resource
Accession number :
edsoai.on1445824957
Document Type :
Electronic Resource