[PDF][PDF] Complement signals determine opposite effects of B cells in chemotherapy-induced immunity

Y Lu, Q Zhao, JY Liao, E Song, Q Xia, J Pan, Y Li, J Li… - Cell, 2020 - cell.com
Y Lu, Q Zhao, JY Liao, E Song, Q Xia, J Pan, Y Li, J Li, B Zhou, Y Ye, C Di, S Yu, Y Zeng…
Cell, 2020cell.com
Understanding molecular mechanisms that dictate B cell diversity is important for targeting B
cells as anti-cancer treatment. Through the single-cell dissection of B cell heterogeneity in
longitudinal samples of patients with breast cancer before and after neoadjuvant
chemotherapy, we revealed that an ICOSL+ B cell subset emerges after chemotherapy.
Using three immunocompetent mouse models, we recapitulated the subset switch of human
tumor-infiltrating B cells during chemotherapy. By employing B-cell-specific deletion mice …
Summary
Understanding molecular mechanisms that dictate B cell diversity is important for targeting B cells as anti-cancer treatment. Through the single-cell dissection of B cell heterogeneity in longitudinal samples of patients with breast cancer before and after neoadjuvant chemotherapy, we revealed that an ICOSL+ B cell subset emerges after chemotherapy. Using three immunocompetent mouse models, we recapitulated the subset switch of human tumor-infiltrating B cells during chemotherapy. By employing B-cell-specific deletion mice, we showed that ICOSL in B cells boosts anti-tumor immunity by enhancing the effector to regulatory T cell ratio. The signature of ICOSL+ B cells is imprinted by complement-CR2 signaling, which is triggered by immunogenic cell death. Moreover, we identified that CD55, a complement inhibitory protein, determines the opposite roles of B cells in chemotherapy. Collectively, we demonstrated a critical role of the B cell subset switch in chemotherapy response, which has implications in designing novel anti-cancer therapies.
Video Abstract
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