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TSAd Plays a Major Role in Myo9b-Mediated Suppression of Malignant Pleural Effusion by Regulating TH1/TH17 Cell Response

Authors :
Juan Du
Feng-Shuang Yi
Min-Ting Wu
Wen Wang
Xiu-Zhi Wu
Kan Zhai
Zeng-Tao Luo
Zhong‐Yin Huang
Huan-Zhong Shi
Shu-Feng Dong
Xin Zhang
Xue-Bin Pei
Xin-Yu Shi
Yuan Yang
Source :
The Journal of Immunology. 205:2926-2935
Publication Year :
2020
Publisher :
The American Association of Immunologists, 2020.

Abstract

Emerging evidence indicates that Myo9b is a cancer metastasis–related protein and functions in a variety of immune-related diseases. However, it is not clear whether and how Myo9b functions in malignant pleural effusion (MPE). In this study, our data showed that Myo9b expression levels correlated with lung cancer pleural metastasis, and nucleated cells in MPE from either patients or mice expressed a lower level of Myo9b than those in the corresponding blood. Myo9b deficiency in cancer cells suppressed MPE development via inhibition of migration. Myo9b deficiency in mice suppressed MPE development by decreasing TH1 cells and increasing TH17 cells. CD4+ naive T cells isolated from Myo9b−/− mouse spleens exhibited less TH1 cell differentiation and more TH17 cell differentiation in vitro. mRNA sequencing of nucleated cells showed that T cell–specific adaptor protein (TSAd) was downregulated in Myo9b−/− mouse MPE, and enrichment of the H3K27me3 mark in the TSAd promoter region was found in the Myo9b−/− group. Naive T cells purified from wild type mouse spleens transfected with TSAd-specific small interfering RNAs (siRNAs) also showed less TH1 cell differentiation and more TH17 cell differentiation than those from the siRNA control group. Furthermore, downregulation of TSAd in mice using cholesterol-conjugated TSAd-specific siRNA suppressed MPE development, decreased TH1 cells, and increased TH17 cells in MPE in vivo. Taken together, Myo9b deficiency suppresses MPE development not only by suppressing pleural cancer metastasis but also by regulating TH1/TH17 cell response via a TSAd-dependent pathway. This work suggests Myo9b and TSAd as novel candidates for future basic and clinical investigations of cancer.

Details

ISSN :
15506606 and 00221767
Volume :
205
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
The Journal of Immunology
Accession number :
edsair.doi...........811a1e2a9b50a6ca0d4d61289e23f963