Bacteria-induced gap junctions in tumors favor antigen cross-presentation and antitumor immunity Journal Article


Authors: Saccheri, F.; Pozzi, C.; Avogadri, F.; Barozzi, S.; Faretta, M.; Fusi, P.; Rescigno, M.
Article Title: Bacteria-induced gap junctions in tumors favor antigen cross-presentation and antitumor immunity
Abstract: Antigen-presenting dendritic cells (DCs) trigger the activation of cytotoxic CD8 T cells that target and eliminate cells with the antigen on their surface. Although DCs usually pick up and process antigens themselves, they can also receive peptide antigens from other cells via gap junctions. We demonstrate here that infection with Salmonella can induce, in both human and murine melanoma cells, the up-regulation of connexin 43 (Cx43), a ubiquitous protein that forms gap junctions and that is normally lost during melanoma progression. Bacteria-treated melanoma cells can establish functional gap junctions with adjacent DCs. After bacterial infection, these gap junctions transferred preprocessed antigenic peptides from the tumor cells to the DCs, which then presented those peptides on their surface. These peptides activated cytotoxic T cells against the tumor antigen, which could control the growth of distant uninfected tumors. Melanoma cells in which Cx43 had been silenced, when infected in vivo with bacteria, failed to elicit a cytotoxic antitumor response, indicating that this Cx43 mechanism is the principal one used in vivo for the generation of antitumor responses. The Cx43-dependent cross-presentation pathway is more effective than standard protocols of DC loading (peptide, tumor lysates, or apoptotic bodies) for generating DC-based tumor vaccines that both inhibit existing tumors and prevent tumor establishment. In conclusion, we exploited an antimicrobial response present in tumor cells to activate cytotoxic CD8 T cells specific for tumor-generated peptides that could directly recognize and kill tumor cells.
Keywords: controlled study; protein expression; human cell; nonhuman; lymph nodes; protein localization; animal cell; mouse; animal; metabolism; animals; mice; melanoma; dendritic cell; fluorescent dye; fluorescent dyes; animal experiment; animal model; small interfering rna; rna, small interfering; in vivo study; in vitro study; pathology; tumor antigen; mice, inbred c57bl; c57bl mouse; salmonellosis; antigen presentation; immunology; dendritic cells; antigens, neoplasm; gamma interferon; lymph node; cytotoxic t lymphocyte; melanoma cell; cellular distribution; tumor immunity; upregulation; interferon-gamma; cell junction; tumor growth; phagocytosis; t lymphocyte activation; cell killing; connexin 43; cross presentation; gap junction; salmonella typhimurium; salmonella; cross-priming; gap junctions; salmonella infections
Journal Title: Science Translational Medicine
Volume: 2
Issue: 44
ISSN: 1946-6234
Publisher: American Association for the Advancement of Science  
Date Published: 2010-08-11
Start Page: 44ra57
Language: English
DOI: 10.1126/scitranslmed.3000739
PUBMED: 20702856
PROVIDER: scopus
DOI/URL:
Notes: --- - "Cited By (since 1996): 6" - "Export Date: 20 April 2011" - "Art. No.: 44ra57" - "Source: Scopus"
Altmetric
Citation Impact
BMJ Impact Analytics
MSK Authors