| Literature DB >> 33441309 |
Lei Wang1, Shuiliang Yu1, Ernest R Chan2, Kai-Yuan Chen3, Cui Liu1, Danian Che1, Amad Awadallah4, Jay Myers5, David Askew5, Alex Y Huang5, Ivan Maillard6, Dan Huang7, Wei Xin1,4, Lan Zhou8,4.
Abstract
Conventional dendritic cells (cDC) play a central role in T-cell antitumor responses. We studied the significance of Notch-regulated DC immune responses in a mouse model of colitis-associated colorectal cancer in which there is epithelial downregulation of Notch/Hes1 signaling. This defect phenocopies that caused by GMDS (GDP-mannose 4,6-dehydratase) mutation in human colorectal cancers. We found that, although wild-type immune cells restrained dysplasia progression and decreased the incidence of adenocarcinoma in chimeric mice, the immune system with Notch2 deleted in all blood lineages or in only DCs promoted inflammation-associated transformation. Notch2 signaling deficiency not only impaired cDC terminal differentiation, but also downregulated CCR7 expression, reduced DC migration, and suppressed antigen cross-presentation to CD8+ T cells. Transfer of Notch-primed DCs restrained inflammation-associated dysplasia progression. Consistent with the mouse data, we observed a correlation between infiltrating cDC1 and Notch2 signaling in human colorectal cancers and found that GMDS-mutant colorectal cancers showed decreased CCR7 expression and suppressed cDC1 signature gene expression. Suppressed cDC1 gene signature expression in human colorectal cancer was associated with a poor prognosis. In summary, our study supports an important role for Notch2 signaling in cDC1-mediated antitumor immunity and indicates that Notch2-controlled DCs restrain inflammation-associated colon cancer development in mice. ©2021 American Association for Cancer Research.Entities:
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Year: 2021 PMID: 33441309 PMCID: PMC7925430 DOI: 10.1158/2326-6066.CIR-20-0428
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Cancer Immunol Res ISSN: 2326-6066 Impact factor: 12.020