4.7 Article

Immunoregulatory roles of versican proteolysis in the myeloma microenvironment

Journal

BLOOD
Volume 128, Issue 5, Pages 680-685

Publisher

AMER SOC HEMATOLOGY
DOI: 10.1182/blood-2016-03-705780

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Funding

  1. Valbona Cali and the Cleveland Clinic, National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute (NHLBI)
  2. American Cancer Society Research Scholar Grant [127508-RSG-15-045-01-LIB]
  3. merican Society of Hematology Bridge Grant
  4. Wisconsin Alumni Research Foundation through the UW Graduate School
  5. Kirschstein National Research Service Award [T32HL007899]
  6. UW Carbone Cancer Center Trillium Fund for Multiple Myeloma Research
  7. UW Department of Medicine
  8. UW Carbone Cancer Center [P30 CA014520]
  9. UW-Madison School of Medicine and Public Health
  10. National Institutes of Health NHLBI [HL107147]

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Myeloma immunosurveillance remains incompletely understood. We have demonstrated proteolytic processing of the matrix proteoglycan, versican (VCAN), in myeloma tumors. Whereas intact VCAN exerts tolerogenic activities through Toll-like receptor 2 (TLR2) binding, the immunoregulatory consequences of VCAN proteolysis remain unknown. Here we show that human myeloma tumors displaying CD8(+) infiltration/aggregates underwent VCAN proteolysis at a site predicted to generate a glycosaminoglycan-bereft N-terminal fragment, versikine. Myeloma-associated macrophages (MAMs), rather than tumor cells, chiefly produced V1-VCAN, the precursor to versikine, whereas stromal cell-derived ADAMTS1 was the most robustly expressed VCAN-degrading protease. Purified versikine induced early expression of inflammatory cytokines interleukin 1 beta (IL-1 beta) and IL-6 by human myeloma marrow-derived MAMs. We show that versikine signals through pathways both dependent and independent of Tpl2 kinase, a key regulator of nuclear factor kappa B1-mediated MAPK activation in macrophages. Unlike intact VCAN, versikine-induced Il-6 production was partially independent of Tlr2. In a model of macrophage-myeloma cell crosstalk, versikine induced components of T-cell inflammation, including IRF8-dependent type I interferon transcriptional signatures and T-cell chemoattractant CCL2. Thus the interplay between stromal cells and myeloid cells in the myeloma microenvironment generates versikine, a novel bioactive damage-associated molecular pattern that may facilitate immune sensing of myeloma tumors and modulate the tolerogenic consequences of intact VCAN accumulation. Therapeutic versikine administration may potentiate T-cell-activating immunotherapies.

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