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BFAR coordinates TGFβ signaling to modulate Th9-mediated cancer immunotherapy

TGFβ is essential for the generation of anti-tumor Th9 cells; on the other hand, it causes resistance against anti-tumor immunity. Despite recent progress, the underlying mechanism reconciling the double-edged effect of TGFβ signaling in Th9-mediated cancer immunotherapy remains elusive. Here, we fi...

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Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Pei, Siyu, Huang, Mingzhu, Huang, Jia, Zhu, Xiaodong, Wang, Hui, Romano, Simona, Deng, Xiuyu, Wang, Yan, Luo, Yixiao, Hao, Shumeng, Xu, Jing, Yu, Tao, Zhu, Qingchen, Yuan, Jia, Shen, Kunwei, Liu, Zhiqiang, Hu, Guohong, Peng, Chao, Luo, Qingquan, Wen, Zhenzhen, Dai, Dongfang, Xiao, Yichuan
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Rockefeller University Press 2021
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8091105/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/33914044
http://dx.doi.org/10.1084/jem.20202144
Descripción
Sumario:TGFβ is essential for the generation of anti-tumor Th9 cells; on the other hand, it causes resistance against anti-tumor immunity. Despite recent progress, the underlying mechanism reconciling the double-edged effect of TGFβ signaling in Th9-mediated cancer immunotherapy remains elusive. Here, we find that TGFβ-induced down-regulation of bifunctional apoptosis regulator (BFAR) represents the key mechanism preventing the sustained activation of TGFβ signaling and thus impairing Th9 inducibility. Mechanistically, BFAR mediates K63-linked ubiquitination of TGFβR1 at K268, which is critical to activate TGFβ signaling. Thus, BFAR deficiency or K268R knock-in mutation suppresses TGFβR1 ubiquitination and Th9 differentiation, thereby inhibiting Th9-mediated cancer immunotherapy. More interestingly, BFAR-overexpressed Th9 cells exhibit promising therapeutic efficacy to curtail tumor growth and metastasis and promote the sensitivity of anti–PD-1–mediated checkpoint immunotherapy. Thus, our findings establish BFAR as a key TGFβ-regulated gene to fine-tune TGFβ signaling that causes Th9 induction insensitivity, and they highlight the translational potential of BFAR in promoting Th9-mediated cancer immunotherapy.