Literature DB >> 32236615

Differentiation of cancer cells upregulates HLA‑G and PD‑L1.

Matti Ullah1, Sarah Meziani1, Shahid Shah1, Rachid Kaci1, Cynthia Pimpie1, Marc Pocard1, Massoud Mirshahi1.   

Abstract

A tumor contains special types of cells that have characteristics similar to stem cells that aid in tumor initiation, evasion and proliferation and are often resistant to chemotherapy. These cancer stem cells can be differentiated to eradicate their stemness and proliferative capacity by differentiating agents. This study investigated the effect of differentiation on the expression of two immune checkpoint inhibitors, human leukocyte antigen‑G (HLA‑G) and programmed death ligand‑1 (PD‑L1). Two cancer cell lines (OVCAR‑3‑NIH and KATO‑III) were treated with adipocyte and neurocyte differentiation media for 14 days. Bone‑marrow derived mesenchymal stem cells (BM‑MSCs) were used as control healthy stem cells. We found that the cancer cell lines (OVCAR‑3‑NIH and KATO‑III) when subjected to differentiation lost their proliferation ability. BM‑MSC proliferation was not halted but was decreased in the adipocyte differentiation media. There was no decrease in the CD90 stem cell marker in the BM‑MSCs; however, both cancer cell lines showed decreased CD90 stem cell marker. A significant increase in HLA‑G was noted for both the cancer cell lines following adipocyte differentiation. No effect was found for BM‑MSCs. Moreover, an increase in PD‑L1 in cancer cell lines was found following neurocyte differentiation. Moreover, we found that differentiation resulted in decreased PD‑L1 expression in BM‑MSCs. Differentiation therapy of cancer stem cells may result in increased immunosuppression ability, hence causing hindrance in the removal of cancer cells. Moreover, the differentiation of healthy stem cells can result in increased immunogenic reactivity owing to a decrease in PD‑L1 expression.

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Year:  2020        PMID: 32236615      PMCID: PMC7160553          DOI: 10.3892/or.2020.7572

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Oncol Rep        ISSN: 1021-335X            Impact factor:   3.906


Introduction

The traditional approach towards cancer treatment is to kill the tumor cells, yet there exists a parallel idea to transform/revert cancer cells into normal cells, thereby destroying their ability to proliferate (1). It has been reported that blood cancers and solid tumors contain special type of cancer stem cells (CSCs), also known as tumor-initiating cells. These cells assist in tumor progression and metastasis and are resistant to chemotherapy (2). Poor cellular differentiation is one of the main traits of cancer. Hence, differentiation therapy is focused on reactivating the endogenous differentiation pathways in CSCs (3). Differentiation therapy is a therapeutic strategy that transforms malignant cells to a more benign cell type by masking the proliferative abilities of these cells. CSCs, like other stem cells exhibit low immunogenicity that helps them evade the immune response of the host, hence making them invulnerable not only to radiotherapy and chemotherapy but also towards immunotherapy (4). Immune system surveillance of tumor cells occurs through a process known as tumor immune editing. Tumor cells are also reported to highly express a T-cell inhibitory molecule i.e. PD-L1 in order to evade the immune response. Programmed death ligand-1 (PD-L1) is a well-known molecule in tumor evasion and has been documented in several studies (5). It helps cancer cells in immune evasion by binding to the PD-1 receptor on T cells thus inhibiting T-cell activity. There are several antibodies for PD-L1 which are in phase III clinical trials with the aim to suppress the immune evasion ability of cancer cells (6). Another important molecule that is involved in each of these three phases is human leukocyte antigen-G (HLA-G). It renders cytotoxic cells ineffective towards tumor cells through trogocytosis and by inhibiting or decreasing the killer function of T and natural killer (NK) cells (7,8). The increased expression of both molecules i.e. HLA-G (9–11) and PD-L1 (12–17) are found to be correlated with a decreased survival rate. One of the important examples of differentiation therapy is the use of all-trans retinoic acid (atRA) in acute promyelocytic leukemia (APL) that has shown promising results in APL but not for other cancer subtypes. The sensitivity of APL for atRA is dependent on the expression of the promyelocytic leukemia/retinoic acid receptor α (PML-RARα) protein (18). Even in APL, the major issue is of relapse with cells which are more aggressive in nature and are difficult to treat (19). Recently, we reported the impact of a cell differentiation inducer on epithelial-mesenchymal transition as well as on solid cancer stem cells (20). Here, the aim of the present study was to investigate the effect of differentiation in the perspective of cancer immune evasion through evaluation of HLA-G and PD-L1, both of which are involved in inactivation of T and NK cells.

Materials and methods

Cell culture

Cancer cell lines used included: OVCAR-3-NIH (ovarian) and KATO-III (gastric) purchased from ATCC®. Adult human mesenchymal stem cells (BM-MSCs; derived from bone marrow) obtained from ‘PromoCell GmbH’ were used as control (normal healthy stem cells). The cell lines were chosen based on expression of the CD90 stem cell marker, and immune checkpoint molecules, PD-L1 and HLA-G. Each cell line was maintained in medium specified by the provider at 37°C in a humidified chamber maintained with 5% CO2. The media used were RPMI-1640 for OVCAR-3-NIH, IMDM for KATO-III each supplemented with 10% fetal bovine serum (FBS), 1% pencillin-streptomycin and 1% L-glutamine (Gibco; Thermo Fisher Scientific, Inc.), while specialized Mesenchymal Stem Cell Medium from PromoCell was used for the BM-MSCs. All cell lines used were of low passages (less than 7 passages) to maintain pluripotency.

Differentiation

The cultured cells were washed with phosphate-buffered saline (PBS) to remove any medium constituents. To induce adipocyte and neurocyte differentiation, KATO-III, OVCAR-3-NIH and BM-MSCs were incubated for 14 days with the StemPro® Adipocyte, Differentiation Kit (Gibco Life Technologies™; Thermo Fisher Scientific, Inc.) and Neurobasal® medium containing 2 mM B-27 supplement and 1% glutamine (Thermo Fisher Scientific, Inc.) with regular medium feeding. For coloration, after 14 days the induced cells were fixed using 4% paraformaldehyde (PFA) for 10 min at room temperature and then washed with PBS to remove PFA. Adipocytes contain lipid droplets in the cytoplasm which were colored using 60% Oil red O (0.3 g Oil red O in 1 ml isopropanol) in distilled water. The cells were incubated in 60% isopropanol for 5 min before incubation with Oil red O solution. The differentiated neurocytes were stained for nissl bodies using nissl staining solution (0.5 g Cresyl violet in 100 ml of 0.6% glacial acetic acid) for 30 min. Cells were then imaged using EVOS FL Auto Imaging System (EVOS) microscope at ×20 magnification.

FACS

To analyze stem cell properties, the live cells cultured in normal media (control) and differentiation media (adipocyte and neurocyte differentiation medium) were stained using the CD90 antibody (Beckman Coulter; cat. no. IM1840U) at a dilution of 1:100. FACS was performed using BD FACSCanto™ II eight-color standard flow cymometer (Becton Dickinson Biosciences, France). The data were analyzed using Kaluza 2.0 Analysis software (Beckman Coulter).

Cell proliferation assay

In order to evaluate the proliferative ability of cells following differentiation, the cell viability assay was performed using the RealTime-Glo™ MT cell viability test (Promega France). KATO-III, OVCAR-3-NIH and MSC-BMs were cultured (500 cells in 96-well plates) using classic culture media. After 24 h, the media were replaced with differentiation media (StemPro® Adipocyte Differentiation Kit and Neurobasal® medium) containing luminescence agent and substrate. Bioluminescence was measured with a spectrofluorometer (SAFAS Xenius XC; SAFAS) at a specified interval. Cell proliferation curve was made using GraphPad Prism 6 (GraphPad Software, Inc.) and the difference in proliferation was analyzed using two-way analysis of variance (ANOVA).

Real-time qPCR

Relative gene expression of HLA-G and PD-L1 was compared for each cell line using ß-actin as the housekeeping gene through qPCR performed in Roche Lightcycler 96 (Roche Applied Science). The primers used were: ß-actin (sense, AGAGCTACGAGCTGCCTGAC and antisense, AGCACTGTGTTGGCGTACAG), PD-L1 (sense, CAAAGAATTTTGGTTGTGGA and antisense, AGCTTCTCCTCTCTCTTGGA), HLA-G (sense, GCGGCTACTACAACCAGAGC and anti-sense, GAGGTAATCCTTGCCATCGTAG). The relative expression was calculated using the ΔΔCq method (21).

Immunohistochemistry

The differentiated cells as well as controls were collected on slides using Cytospin centrifugation (Cytospin2; Shandon Inc.). The slides were then fixed for 10 min using 4% PFA solution. After washing with PBS-Tween (0.1%) for 5 min, the cells were incubated for 30 min in 1% BSA in PBS-Tween. After that the cells were incubated with anti-rabbit anti-HLA-G polyclonal antibody (Epigentek Group Inc.; cat. no. A53328) and anti-mouse anti-PD-L1 monoclonal antibody (Proteintech Group, Inc.; cat. no. 17952-1-AP) in dilution of 1:100 using 1% BSA (PBS-Tween) for 3 h at room temperature. The cells were washed with PBS three times before being incubated with a mixture of goat secondary antibodies anti-mouse Alexa Fluor 594 (cat. no. A-11005; Thermo Fischer Scientific, Inc.) and anti-rabbit Alexa Fluor 488 (cat. no. A32731; Thermo Fischer Scientific, Inc.) for 1 h. The slides were washed and mounted with an aqueous medium containing DAPI (VectaMount®; Vector Laboratories, Inc.) and allowed to dry in the dark. The labeling was then analyzed by immunofluorescence using an EVOS FL Auto Imaging System (EVOS) fluorescence microscope at ×20 magnification.

Statistical analysis

Proliferation data were analyzed using two-way ANOVA with post-hoc Bonferroni's test. The qPCR data were analyzed using ANOVA test followed by post-hoc Bonferroni's test. The statistical analysis was performed on the GraphPadPrism® software (GraphPad Software, Inc.). A P-value of <0.05 was considered significantly different. The bars and statistical values are represented as mean ± SEM (standard error of the mean).

Results

Differentiation of cancer cells

Decrease in stem cell properties after differentiation

The CD90 stem cell marker was selected owing to its presence in each of our cell line. FACS analysis showed that each cell line exhibited the CD90 marker. The expression of the CD90 marker in MSC-BMs was 99.89% compared to 38.14% in OVCAR-3-NIH and 23.51% in KATO-III cells. A significant decrease in the CD90 marker was observed after treatment with differentiation medium in each of the cancer cell line. The percentage of OVCAR-3-NIH cells expressing the CD90 marker was 4.8 and 1.73% after adipocyte differentiation and neurocyte differentiation, respectively, compared to 38.1% in the OVCAR-3-NIH cells cultured in classic media. Similarly, adipocyte differentiated and neurocyte differentiated KATO-III cells showed 2.3 and 1.6% CD90 marker expression, respectively. No decrease in CD90 marker expression was noted in the BM-MSCs (Fig. 1).
Figure 1.

CD90 marker expression before and after differentiation. (A) CD90 marker expression in MSC-BMs, OVCAR-3-NIH and KATO-III cell lines before (CTRL) and after differentiation (adipocyte and neurocyte). (B) FACS peak graphs showing the CD90 marker expression [(red) and black (isotype control)]. Adipo, adipocyte differentiation medium; Neuro, neurocyte differentiation medium; MSC-BMs, bone-marrow derived mesenchymal stem cells. (***P<0.001, ****P<0.0001).

Decreased cell proliferation and change in the cytological aspects of cancer cells after differentiation

Adipogenic and neurogenic differentiation of cell lines was confirmed by the visualization of intracytoplasmic lipid drops stained in red using Oil red O (Fig. 2A-B) and dark black-violet (Fig. 2A-D) due to accumulations of nissl bodies respectively while the coloration was absent in the cells grown in classic culture media (Fig. 2A-a and C). We found 50 to 60% of differentiated cells in the BM-MSCs and KATO-III, and up to 80% in the OVCAR-3-NIH cells (Fig. 2B) after 14 days of incubation with differentiation induction media.
Figure 2.

Coloration (staining) of the differentiated cells and proliferation rate after differentiation. The differentiation into adipocytes and neurocytes was confirmed by visual staining. (A) OVCAR-3-NIH, KATO-III and MSC-BMs were evaluated for their differentiation potential into adipocytes and neurocytes when grown in inducing differentiation media. Oil Red O staining (a, control; b, differentiated) revealed lipid droplets (in red) and Nissl bodies were stained with Cresyl violet (c, control; d, differentiated; magnification, ×20). (B) The percentage of differentiation for each cell line into adipocytes and neurocytes after 14 days of incubation with differentiation media. (C) Impact of incubation of differentiation media on real-time cell line proliferation (*P<0.05, **P<0.01, ***P<0.001 and ****P<0.0001). Adipo, adipocyte differentiation medium; Neuro, neurocyte differentiation medium; MSC-BMs, bone-marrow derived mesenchymal stem cells.

When the cell lines were treated with differentiation induction media, a significant proliferation inhibition was observed for each cell line (P<0.005). This inhibition was maintained over time. At 72 h, the inhibition was highly significant for the two differentiation induction media when compared with the control for each cell line (P<0.0001; Fig. 2C).

Modified immune checkpoints

qPCR analysis

We observed a significant increase in HLA-G expression (Fig. 3A) after adipocyte differentiation for the two cancer cell lines, OVCAR-3-NIH (P<0.05) and KATO-III (P<0.0001). However, the BM-MSCs did not show any effect of differentiation on expression of HLA-G. In addition, among the three cell lines, only OVCAR-3-NIH showed a strong increase in HLA-G expression after neurocyte differentiation (P<0.0001). The expression of PD-L1 was upregulated by adipocyte differentiation in KATO-III cancer cells (P<0.05), and was upregulated in both cancer cell lines (OVCAR-3-NIH and KATO-III) following neurocyte differentiation (P<0.0001; Fig. 3B). Notably, the BM-MSCs showed a significant decrease in PD-L1 expression following adipocyte as well as neurocyte differentiation (P<0.0001).
Figure 3.

Relative expression of HLA-G and PD-L1 before and after differentiation. (A) HLA-G and (B) PD-L1 expression in MSC-BMs, OVCAR-3-NIH and KATO-III cells before differentiation (CTRL; green) and after differentiation (Adipocyte, blue; Neurocyte, purple) (*P<0.05 and ****P<0.0001). HLA-G, human leukocyte antigen-G; PD-L1, programmed death ligand-1; Adipo, adipocyte differentiation medium; Neuro, neurocyte differentiation medium; MSC-BMs, bone-marrow derived mesenchymal stem cells.

Immunocytochemical analysis

The qPCR results were confirmed through immunofluorescence microscopy. We observed a strong noticeable increased expression of HLA-G in OVCAR-3-NIH cells after neurocyte differentiation and after adipocyte differentiation in KATO-III cells. However, no observable difference was found in the expression of HLA-G in differentiated BM-MSCs compared to the control cells (Fig. 4A).
Figure 4.

Expression of HLA-G and PD-L1 in cell lines before and after differentiation through immunofluorescence. OVCAR-3-NIH, KATO-III and MSC-BMs without treatment as control (left), treatment with adipocyte-inducing medium (middle) or treatment with neurocyte-inducing medium (right). (A) HLA-G expression in OVCAR-3-NIH, KATO-III and MSC-BMs with nuclear stained using DAPI (blue) and HLA-G in green. (B) PD-L1 expression in OVCAR-3-NIH, KATO-III and MSC-BMs is shown as red staining with nuclei in blue. Magnification, ×20. Tables show semi-quantitative analysis of HLA-G and PD-L1 expression (− negative, + low expression, ++ intermediate expression, +++ high expression). HLA-G, human leukocyte antigen-G; PD-L1, programmed death ligand-1; MSC-BMs, bone-marrow derived mesenchymal stem cells.

PD-L1 expression was strongly upregulated only by adipocyte differentiation, although a slight upregulation was also observered in the OVCAR-3-NIH cell line following neurocyte differentiation. However, it was upregulated in KATO-III cells after adipocyte as well as neurocyte differentiation. Moreover, notably PD-L1 expression was downregulated in BM-MSCs after neurocyte and adipocyte differentiation (Fig. 4B).

Discussion

Malignant tumors contain specific type of cells which exhibit stem cell properties and are known as cancer stem cells (CSCs) (22). These cells are resistant to chemotherapy and are capable of self-renewing giving rise to different cell types and are invulnerable to immune cell attack. This ability makes CSCs an important target to fight against cancer relapse after remission. CSCs in tumors can be identified using stem cell marker expression such as CD90. CSCs follow several pathways for their renewal and proliferation, hence regular chemotherapy or targeting one pathway is not sufficient to limit their carcinogenicity. Another approach to target CSCs is to use differentiation therapy (23), which induces differentiation in CSCs in order to limit their proliferation and renewal capacity. Our group has previously demonstrated that differentiation of cancer cells induces mesenchymal to epithelial transition (20). Therefore, using the same model, we aimed to investigate how the differentiation of cancer cells impact the expression of immune checkpoints mainly human leukocyte antigen-G (HLA-G) and programmed death ligand-1 (PD-L1). In order to confirm differentiation in vitro, we evaluated the CD90 stem cell marker expression in the cancer cell lines. We found a significant decrease in CD90 stem cell marker in the cancer cell lines. However, there was no difference in the CD90 expression marker in the bone marrow-derived mesenchymal stem cells (BM-MSCs). This demonstrated that BM-MSCs still retained their stem cell properties even after incubation in differentiation-inducing media for 14 days. Furthermore, to confirm the differentiation of cancer cells in different cell lines, we performed histological staining. For cells differentiated into adipocytes we used Oil-red O staining that stains lipid droplets in red color. We found the presence of oil droplets in the majority of cells following differentiation in each of the cell lines. For neurocyte differentiated cells, we found the presence of dark violet nissl bodies present in cells after staining with Cresyl violet. This further confirmed the differentiation of cancer cell lines into respective cell types. As the ideal media for differentiation should block the proliferation of cancer cells, we performed a viability assay in order to assess the effect of differentiation on the growth and proliferation of cells. We found that the differentiation media halted the proliferation of cancer cells after 30 h, and there was a significant decrease in proliferation capacity of the MSC-BMs after 72 h of incubation in the differentiation media. This suggests the importance of differentiation therapy specifically for cancer cells that not only differentiates CSCs but can also block the proliferation of cancer cells. These results validate the differentiation model reported by Shah et al (20) in two additional cell lines. In order to investigate the effects of differentiation on the immune profile of the cell lines, we evaluated the expression of HLA-G and PD-L1, both being known to suppress the immune system. We found that in cancer cell lines, adipocyte differentiation resulted in increased expression of both HLA-G as well as PD-L1 in the KATO-III cell line. while, only HLA-G expression was increased in the OVCAR-3-NIH cells following adipocyte differentiation. On the other hand, differentiation to neurocytes resulted in increased expression of HLA-G as well as PD-L1 in the OVCAR-3-NIH cell line, but in the KATO-III cells only an increase in PD-L1 expression was observed. These results suggest that the CSCs upon differentiation can lead to increased immunosuppression, which can make it difficult for the body's immune system to eliminate them (24). However, development of a mouse model is required to further investigate the oncogenic potential of the cancer cells after differentiation. Hence, we suggest combining the immune checkpoint inhibitor with differentiation therapy in order to avoid the immune evasion that may be attributed to increased expression of HLA-G or PD-L1 following differentiation therapy. Interestingly, no change in HLA-G expression was found in BM-MSCs following adipocyte or neurocyte differentiation. This finding is in accordance with previously reported results, showing that there is no impact on the immunosuppressive property of MSCs after induction of osteocyte differentiation (25). However, an interesting observation was found for BM-MSCs where the PD-L1 levels were strongly decreased after adipocyte as well as neurocyte differentiation. Therefore, even when HLA-G expression was not altered by induction of differentiation, the BM-MSCs showed lower expression of PD-L1 that can result in increased immunogenic potential in the differentiated stem cells. These results were also confirmed through immunofluorescence. An interesting observation here, is that in an autoimmune disease of aplastic anemia, there is enhanced bone marrow adiposity (26–28). We found that the differentiation of bone marrow cells in adipocytes resulted in decreased PD-L1 expression, which may provoke the immune response against the bone marrow cells, causing aplastic anemia. Aplastic anemia is attributed to the adipogenesis in bone marrow. We, for the first time, explained in vitro that bone marrow cell differentiation into adipocytes leads to decreased PD-L1 expression that may result in the rejection of administered bone marrow stem cells. In conclusion, we found that tumors in response to stress conditions such as differentiation alters their immunological characteristics. The present study suggests that the differentiated cancer cells can be more immunosuppressive through an increase in both the immune suppressive proteins, HLA-G and PD-L1.
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