4.7 Article

Transcriptional regulation of VEGFA expression in T-regulatory cells from breast cancer patients

Journal

CANCER IMMUNOLOGY IMMUNOTHERAPY
Volume 70, Issue 7, Pages 1877-1891

Publisher

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s00262-020-02808-0

Keywords

Endothelial cell; FOXP3; Treg cells; STAT3; VEGFA; Neo-angiogenesis

Funding

  1. Department of Biotechnology, Government of India

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The initiation of new blood vessel formation is crucial for tumor growth, with Treg cells secreting high levels of VEGFA to induce angiogenesis. FOXP3 and STAT3 binding to the VEGFA promoter in Treg cells promotes neo-angiogenesis in breast cancer. Targeting Tregs in mice with breast tumor reduces both tumor growth and neo-angiogenesis levels.
The initiation of new blood vessel formation (neo-angiogenesis) is one of the primary requirements for the establishment of tumor. As the tumor grows beyond a certain size, a hypoxic-condition arises in the inner core of tumor, triggering the release of chemokines, which attract T-regulatory (Treg) cells in the tumor-site. The presence of FOXP3, a lineage-specific transcription factor, expressing Treg cells in various types of tumor implements immunosuppressive and tumor-promoting strategies. One such strategy is the invitation of endothelial cells for neo-vascularization in the tumor site. Here we report that as the disease progresses, Treg cells from breast cancer patients are capable of secreting high-amount of VEGFA. The VEGFA promoter lacks Treg-specific transcription factor FOXP3 binding site. FOXP3 in association with locus-specific transcription factor STAT3 binds to VEGFA promoter to induce its transcription in Treg cells obtained from breast cancer patients. Treg cell-secreted VEGFA induces neo-angiogenesis from endothelial cells under in-vitro conditions. Targeting Tregs in mice with breast tumor reduces tumor growth as well as the level of neo-angiogenesis in the tumor tissue.

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