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Cancer-derived cholesterol sulfate is a key mediator to prevent tumor infiltration by effector T cells.

Authors :
Tatsuguchi, Takaaki
Uruno, Takehito
Sugiura, Yuki
Sakata, Daiji
Izumi, Yoshihiro
Sakurai, Tetsuya
Hattori, Yuko
Oki, Eiji
Kubota, Naoto
Nishimoto, Koshiro
Oyama, Masafumi
Kunimura, Kazufumi
Ohki, Takuto
Bamba, Takeshi
Tahara, Hideaki
Sakamoto, Michiie
Nakamura, Masafumi
Suematsu, Makoto
Fukui, Yoshinori
Source :
International Immunology; May2022, Vol. 34 Issue 5, p277-289, 13p
Publication Year :
2022

Abstract

Effective tumor immunotherapy requires physical contact of T cells with cancer cells. However, tumors often constitute a specialized microenvironment that excludes T cells from the vicinity of cancer cells, and its underlying mechanisms are still poorly understood. DOCK2 is a Rac activator critical for migration and activation of lymphocytes. We herein show that cancer-derived cholesterol sulfate (CS), a lipid product of the sulfotransferase SULT2B1b, acts as a DOCK2 inhibitor and prevents tumor infiltration by effector T cells. Using clinical samples, we found that CS was abundantly produced in certain types of human cancers such as colon cancers. Functionally, CS-producing cancer cells exhibited resistance to cancer-specific T-cell transfer and immune checkpoint blockade. Although SULT2B1b is known to sulfate oxysterols and inactivate their tumor-promoting activity, the expression levels of cholesterol hydroxylases, which mediate oxysterol production, are low in SULT2B1b-expressing cancers. Therefore, SULT2B1b inhibition could be a therapeutic strategy to disrupt tumor immune evasion in oxysterol-non-producing cancers. Thus, our findings define a previously unknown mechanism for tumor immune evasion and provide a novel insight into the development of effective immunotherapies. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
09538178
Volume :
34
Issue :
5
Database :
Complementary Index
Journal :
International Immunology
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
156415973
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1093/intimm/dxac002