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β2-Integrin Adhesion Regulates Dendritic Cell Epigenetic and Transcriptional Landscapes to Restrict Dendritic Cell Maturation and Tumor Rejection

Authors :
Mette Ilander
Vincenzo Cerullo
Maria Sokolova
Susanna C. Fagerholm
Imrul Faisal
Robert Tallberg
Maria K. Vartiainen
Jose-Maria Gonzalez-Granado
Heidi Harjunpää
Carla Guenther
Ronen Alon
Manlio Fusciello
Veterinary Biosciences
Integrins in immunity
Molecular and Integrative Biosciences Research Programme
ImmunoViroTherapy Lab
Division of Pharmaceutical Biosciences
Institute of Biotechnology
HUS Comprehensive Cancer Center
Nuclear organization by actin
Drug Research Program
Faculty Common Matters (Faculty of Biology and Environmental Sciences)
Source :
Cancer Immunology Research
Publication Year :
2021
Publisher :
American Association for Cancer Research (AACR), 2021.

Abstract

Dendritic cells (DC), the classic antigen-presenting cells of the immune system, switch from an adhesive, phagocytic phenotype in tissues, to a mature, nonadhesive phenotype that enables migration to lymph nodes to activate T cells and initiate antitumor responses. Monocyte-derived DCs are used in cancer immunotherapy, but their clinical efficacy is limited. Here, we show that cultured bone marrow–derived DCs (BM-DC) expressing dysfunctional β2-integrin adhesion receptors displayed enhanced tumor rejection capabilities in B16.OVA and B16-F10 melanoma models. This was associated with an increased CD8+ T-cell response. BM-DCs expressing dysfunctional β2-integrins or manipulated to disrupt integrin adhesion or integrin/actin/nuclear linkages displayed spontaneous maturation in ex vivo cultures (increased costimulatory marker expression, IL12 production, and 3D migration capabilities). This spontaneous maturation was associated with an altered DC epigenetic/transcriptional profile, including a global increase in chromatin accessibility and H3K4me3/H3K27me3 histone methylation. Genome-wide analyses showed that H3K4me3 methylation was increased on DC maturation genes, such as CD86, Il12, Ccr7, and Fscn1, and revealed a role for a transcription factor network involving Ikaros and RelA in the integrin-regulated phenotype of DCs. Manipulation of the integrin-regulated epigenetic landscape in wild-type ex vivo–cultured BM-DCs enhanced their functionality in tumor rejection in vivo. Thus, β2-integrin–mediated adhesion to the extracellular environment plays an important role in restricting DC maturation and antitumor responses through regulation of the cellular epigenetic and transcriptional landscape. Targeting β2-integrins could therefore be a new strategy to improve the performance of current DC-based cancer immunotherapies.

Details

ISSN :
23266074 and 23266066
Volume :
9
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Cancer Immunology Research
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....cb4c00a725da6fa6fe83a11ffd89f153