4.7 Article

In vivo evidence that secretion of HLA-G by immunogenic tumor cells allows their evasion from immunosurveillance

Journal

INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF CANCER
Volume 135, Issue 9, Pages 2107-2117

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1002/ijc.28845

Keywords

HLA-G; immunotolerance; myeloid-derived suppressor cells; tumor escape

Categories

Funding

  1. CEA
  2. CEA, Region Ile de France
  3. Fondation pour la Recherche Medicale

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Human leukocyte antigen-G (HLA-G) expression by tumors has been evidenced in numerous malignancies in association with poor prognosis and resistance to immunotherapy in humans. Particularly, soluble form of HLA-G was measured at high concentrations in malignant effusions and plasma from cancer patients, and inhibits antitumor immune cells in vitro through interaction with immunoglobulin-like transcript (ILT) receptors. Nevertheless, in vivo study demonstrating that HLA-G secretion by tumor cells allows their escape from immunosurveillance remained to be established. Despite nondescribed murine homolog, direct functional interaction of HLA-G with murine paired immunoglobulin-like receptor (PIR)-B, ortholog of human ILT receptors, enables to investigate its role in vivo. Immunocompetent mice were injected either with syngeneic tumor cells co-expressing HLA-G5, the main soluble HLA-G isoform, and the conformation stabilizer human beta 2-microglubulin (h beta 2m), or with h beta 2m(+)HLA-G5(-) tumor cells. h beta 2m expressed at both tumor cell surface acted as a tumor antigen triggering a specific humoral response. Interestingly, although h beta 2m(+)HLA-G5(-) tumors were rejected, secreted HLA-G5 provided h beta 2m(+)HLA-G5(+) tumors a protection against h beta 2m-elicited immune rejection, enabling such immunogenic tumors to grow similarly to a poorly immunogenic tumor. HLA-G5 tumor expression was associated with local and peripheral immunosuppression, characterized by dampened anti-h beta 2m B-cell response, quantitative and functional T-and B-cell defects, accumulation of myeloid-derived suppressor cells able to inhibit T-cell proliferation and reduced T- and B-cell tumor infiltrate. Our study provides the first in vivo proof that soluble HLA-G counteracts tumor rejection and reinforces the importance to consider HLA-G as a promising target to optimize current cancer immunotherapies.

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