IgA transcytosis and antigen recognition govern ovarian cancer immunity.
Subir BiswasGunjan MandalKyle K PayneCarmen M AnadonChandler D GatenbeeRicardo A ChaurioTara Lee CostichCarlos MoranCarly M HarroKristen E RigolizzoJessica A MineJimena Trillo-TinocoNaoko SasamotoKathryn L TerryDouglas MarchionAndrea BurasRobert M WenhamXiaoqing YuMary K TownsendShelley S TworogerPaulo C RodriguezAlexander A R A AndersonJosé R Conejo-GarciaPublished in: Nature (2021)
Most ovarian cancers are infiltrated by prognostically relevant activated T cells1-3, yet exhibit low response rates to immune checkpoint inhibitors4. Memory B cell and plasma cell infiltrates have previously been associated with better outcomes in ovarian cancer5,6, but the nature and functional relevance of these responses are controversial. Here, using 3 independent cohorts that in total comprise 534 patients with high-grade serous ovarian cancer, we show that robust, protective humoral responses are dominated by the production of polyclonal IgA, which binds to polymeric IgA receptors that are universally expressed on ovarian cancer cells. Notably, tumour B-cell-derived IgA redirects myeloid cells against extracellular oncogenic drivers, which causes tumour cell death. In addition, IgA transcytosis through malignant epithelial cells elicits transcriptional changes that antagonize the RAS pathway and sensitize tumour cells to cytolytic killing by T cells, which also contributes to hindering malignant progression. Thus, tumour-antigen-specific and -antigen-independent IgA responses antagonize the growth of ovarian cancer by governing coordinated tumour cell, T cell and B cell responses. These findings provide a platform for identifying targets that are spontaneously recognized by intratumoural B-cell-derived antibodies, and suggest that immunotherapies that augment B cell responses may be more effective than approaches that focus on T cells, particularly for malignancies that are resistant to checkpoint inhibitors.
Keyphrases
- high grade
- cell death
- cell cycle arrest
- induced apoptosis
- single cell
- blood brain barrier
- immune response
- transcription factor
- gene expression
- dna damage
- drug delivery
- cell therapy
- low grade
- stem cells
- young adults
- adipose tissue
- oxidative stress
- cancer therapy
- working memory
- high throughput
- cell cycle
- metabolic syndrome
- drug release
- cell proliferation
- signaling pathway