Kundu Somanath, Mitra Soham, Roshini Arivazhagan, Longo John A, Longo Sharon L, Venskus Abigail, Babu Harish, Viapiano Mariano S
bioRxiv. 2024 Dec 29:2024.12.28.628031. doi: 10.1101/2024.12.28.628031.
Glioblastoma tumors remain a formidable challenge for immune-based treatments because of their molecular heterogeneity, poor immunogenicity, and growth in the largely isolated and immunosuppressive neural environment. As the tumor grows, GBM cells change the composition and architecture of the neural extracellular matrix (ECM), affecting the mobility, survival, and function of immune cells such as tumor-associated microglia and infiltrated macrophages (TAMs). We have previously described the unique expression of the ECM protein EFEMP1/fibulin-3 in GBM compared to normal brain and demonstrated that this secreted protein promotes the growth of the GBM stem cell (GSC) population. Here, we describe a novel immunomodulatory role of fibulin-3 and the immuno-boosting effects of targeting this ECM protein. Mice carrying fibulin-3-deficient intracranial tumors showed increased myeloid infiltration and reduced expression of TAM pro-tumoral markers (Arginase, CD206) compared to controls. The opposite was observed in orthotopic tumors overexpressing fibulin-3. dataset analysis of clinical datasets revealed positive correlation of fibulin-3 with an immunosuppressive signature, which was validated in GSCs and . We further demonstrated that fibulin-3 regulates the expression of immunosuppressive signals (CSF-1, TGFβ) and the innate immune checkpoint CD47 in GSCs via autocrine activation of NF-κB signaling. Accordingly, immunosuppressive signals were downregulated in GSCs by knockdown of fibulin-3 or inhibition of this protein with an anti-fibulin-3 antibody. Co-culture of GBM cells with syngeneic macrophage lines or primary macrophages in presence of anti-fibulin-3 antibody increased macrophage phagocytosis and antibody-dependent killing of the tumor cells, Furthermore, locoregional delivery of anti-fibulin-3 antibody in mice carrying intracranial GBM increased the infiltration of TAMs expressing pro-inflammatory markers, reducing tumor viability. Our findings show that anti-fibulin-3 approaches, which impact the pericellular ECM surrounding tumor cells and TAMs, can diminish immunosuppression in GBM and boost innate immune responses against the tumor.
胶质母细胞瘤由于其分子异质性、免疫原性差以及在很大程度上孤立且具有免疫抑制作用的神经环境中生长,仍然是基于免疫的治疗面临的一项艰巨挑战。随着肿瘤的生长,胶质母细胞瘤细胞会改变神经细胞外基质(ECM)的组成和结构,影响肿瘤相关小胶质细胞和浸润巨噬细胞(TAMs)等免疫细胞的迁移、存活和功能。我们之前已经描述了与正常脑相比,ECM蛋白EFEMP1/纤维连接蛋白-3在胶质母细胞瘤中的独特表达,并证明这种分泌蛋白可促进胶质母细胞瘤干细胞(GSC)群体的生长。在此,我们描述了纤维连接蛋白-3的一种新的免疫调节作用以及靶向这种ECM蛋白的免疫增强作用。与对照组相比,携带纤维连接蛋白-3缺陷型颅内肿瘤的小鼠显示出髓样细胞浸润增加以及TAM促肿瘤标志物(精氨酸酶、CD206)的表达降低。在过表达纤维连接蛋白-3的原位肿瘤中观察到相反的情况。临床数据集的数据分析显示纤维连接蛋白-3与免疫抑制特征呈正相关,这在GSC中得到了验证。我们进一步证明,纤维连接蛋白-3通过自分泌激活NF-κB信号通路调节GSC中免疫抑制信号(CSF-1、TGFβ)和固有免疫检查点CD47的表达。因此,通过敲低纤维连接蛋白-3或用抗纤维连接蛋白-3抗体抑制该蛋白,GSC中的免疫抑制信号被下调。在抗纤维连接蛋白-3抗体存在的情况下,将胶质母细胞瘤细胞与同基因巨噬细胞系或原代巨噬细胞共培养可增加巨噬细胞的吞噬作用以及抗体依赖性肿瘤细胞杀伤作用。此外,在携带颅内胶质母细胞瘤的小鼠中局部递送抗纤维连接蛋白-3抗体可增加表达促炎标志物的TAM的浸润,降低肿瘤活力。我们的研究结果表明,影响肿瘤细胞和TAM周围细胞外基质的抗纤维连接蛋白-3方法可以减少胶质母细胞瘤中的免疫抑制并增强针对肿瘤的固有免疫反应。