Melanoma tumour‐derived glycans hijack dendritic cell subsets through C‐type lectin receptor binding

Author:

Niveau Camille12,Sosa Cuevas Eleonora12,Roubinet Benoît3,Pezet Mylène4ORCID,Thépaut Michel5,Mouret Stéphane6,Charles Julie6,Fieschi Franck57,Landemarre Ludovic3ORCID,Chaperot Laurence12,Saas Philippe12,Aspord Caroline12ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Institute for Advanced Biosciences, Team: Epigenetics, Immunity, Metabolism, Cell Signaling & Cancer Inserm U 1209, CNRS UMR 5309, Université Grenoble Alpes Grenoble France

2. R&D Laboratory Etablissement Français du Sang Auvergne‐Rhône‐Alpes Grenoble France

3. GLYcoDiag Orléans France

4. Institute for Advanced Biosciences, Plateforme de Microscopie Photonique—Imagerie Cellulaire et Cytométrie en Flux (Microcell), Inserm U1209—CNRS UMR 5309, Université Grenoble Alpes Grenoble France

5. Institut de Biologie Structurale Université Grenoble Alpes, CNRS, CEA Grenoble France

6. Dermatology, Allergology & Photobiology Department CHU Grenoble Alpes, Université Grenoble Alpes Grenoble France

7. Institut Universitaire de France (IUF) Paris France

Abstract

AbstractDendritic cell (DC) subsets play a crucial role in shaping anti‐tumour immunity. Cancer escapes from the control immune system by hijacking DC functions. Yet, bases for such subversion are only partially understood. Tumour cells display aberrant glycan motifs on surface glycoproteins and glycolipids. Such carbohydrate patterns can be sensed by DCs through C‐type lectin receptors (CLRs) that are critical to shape and orientate immune responses. We recently demonstrated that melanoma tumour cells harboured an aberrant ‘glyco‐code,’ and that circulating and tumour‐infiltrating DCs from melanoma patients displayed major perturbations in their CLR profiles. To decipher whether melanoma, through aberrant glycan patterns, may exploit CLR pathways to mislead DCs and evade immune control, we explored the impact of glycan motifs aberrantly found in melanoma (neoglycoproteins [NeoGP] functionalised with Gal, Man, GalNAc, s‐Tn, fucose [Fuc] and GlcNAc residues) on features of human DC subsets (cDC2s, cDC1s and pDCs). We examined the ability of glycans to bind to purified DCs, and assessed their impact on DC basal properties and functional features using flow cytometry, confocal microscopy and multiplex secreted protein analysis. DC subsets differentially bound and internalised NeoGP depending on the nature of the glycan. Strikingly, Fuc directly remodelled the expression of activation markers and immune checkpoints, as well as the cytokine/chemokine secretion profile of DC subsets. NeoGP interfered with Toll like receptor (TLR)‐signalling and pre‐conditioned DCs to exhibit an altered response to subsequent TLR stimulation, dampening antitumor mediators while triggering pro‐tumoral factors. We further demonstrated that DC subsets can bind NeoGP through CLRs, and identified GalNAc/MGL and s‐Tn/ C‐type lectin‐like receptor 2 (CLEC2) as potential candidates. Moreover, DC dysfunction induced by tumour‐associated carbohydrate molecules may be reversed by interfering with the glycan/CLR axis. These findings revealed the glycan/CLR axis as a promising checkpoint to exploit in order to reshape potent antitumor immunity while impeding immunosuppressive pathways triggered by aberrant tumour glycosylation patterns. This may rescue DCs from tumour hijacking and improve clinical success in cancer patients.

Funder

Ligue Contre le Cancer

Société Française de Dermatologie et de Pathologie Sexuellement Transmissible

Groupement des Entreprises Françaises dans la lutte contre le Cancer

Université Grenoble Alpes

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Immunology,Immunology and Allergy

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