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Cancer-cell stiffening via cholesterol depletion enhances adoptive T-cell immunotherapy

Authors :
Massachusetts Institute of Technology. Department of Mechanical Engineering
Lei, Kewen
Kurum, Armand
Kaynak, Murat
Bonati, Lucia
Han, Yulong
Cencen, Veronika
Gao, Min
Xie, Yu-Qing
Guo, Yugang
Hannebelle, Mélanie TM
Wu, Yangping
Zhou, Guanyu
Guo, Ming
Fantner, Georg E
Sakar, Mahmut Selman
Tang, Li
Massachusetts Institute of Technology. Department of Mechanical Engineering
Lei, Kewen
Kurum, Armand
Kaynak, Murat
Bonati, Lucia
Han, Yulong
Cencen, Veronika
Gao, Min
Xie, Yu-Qing
Guo, Yugang
Hannebelle, Mélanie TM
Wu, Yangping
Zhou, Guanyu
Guo, Ming
Fantner, Georg E
Sakar, Mahmut Selman
Tang, Li
Source :
PMC
Publication Year :
2022

Abstract

Malignant transformation and tumour progression are associated with cancer-cell softening. Yet how the biomechanics of cancer cells affects T-cell-mediated cytotoxicity and thus the outcomes of adoptive T-cell immunotherapies is unknown. Here we show that T-cell-mediated cancer-cell killing is hampered for cortically soft cancer cells, which have plasma membranes enriched in cholesterol, and that cancer-cell stiffening via cholesterol depletion augments T-cell cytotoxicity and enhances the efficacy of adoptive T-cell therapy against solid tumours in mice. We also show that the enhanced cytotoxicity against stiffened cancer cells is mediated by augmented T-cell forces arising from an increased accumulation of filamentous actin at the immunological synapse, and that cancer-cell stiffening has negligible influence on: T-cell-receptor signalling, production of cytolytic proteins such as granzyme B, secretion of interferon gamma and tumour necrosis factor alpha, and Fas-receptor-Fas-ligand interactions. Our findings reveal a mechanical immune checkpoint that could be targeted therapeutically to improve the effectiveness of cancer immunotherapies.

Details

Database :
OAIster
Journal :
PMC
Notes :
application/pdf, English
Publication Type :
Electronic Resource
Accession number :
edsoai.on1342471891
Document Type :
Electronic Resource