Small EV in plasma of triple negative breast cancer patients induce intrinsic apoptosis in activated T cells.
Sujan Kumar MondalDerick HaasJie HanTheresa L WhitesidePublished in: Communications biology (2023)
Small extracellular vesicles (sEV) in TNBC patients' plasma promote T cell dysfunction and tumor progression. Here we show that tumor cell-derived exosomes (TEX) carrying surface PDL-1, PD-1, Fas, FasL, TRAIL, CTLA-4 and TGF-β1 induce apoptosis of CD8 + T and CD4 + T cells but spare B and NK cells. Inhibitors blocking TEX-induce receptor/ligand signals and TEX pretreatments with proteinase K or heat fail to prevent T cell apoptosis. Cytochalasin D, Dynosore or Pit Stop 2, partly inhibit TEX uptake but do not prevent T cell apoptosis. TEX entry into T cells induces cytochrome C and Smac release from mitochondria and caspase-3 and PARP cleavage in the cytosol. Expression of survival proteins is reduced in T cells undergoing apoptosis. Independently of external death receptor signaling, TEX entry into T cells induces mitochondrial stress, initiating relentless intrinsic apoptosis, which is responsible for death of activated T cells in the tumor-bearing hosts. The abundance of TEX in cancer plasma represents a danger for adoptively transferred T cells, limiting their therapeutic potential.
Keyphrases
- oxidative stress
- cell death
- cell cycle arrest
- endoplasmic reticulum stress
- nk cells
- poor prognosis
- induced apoptosis
- end stage renal disease
- cell proliferation
- stem cells
- dna damage
- ejection fraction
- chronic kidney disease
- pi k akt
- long non coding rna
- squamous cell carcinoma
- binding protein
- transforming growth factor
- papillary thyroid
- patient reported outcomes