Tumor-derived exosomes antagonize innate antiviral immunity

被引:0
|
作者
Liang Gao
Lin Wang
Tong Dai
Ke Jin
Zhengkui Zhang
Shuai Wang
Feng Xie
Pengfei Fang
Bing Yang
Huizhe Huang
Hans van Dam
Fangfang Zhou
Long Zhang
机构
[1] Life Sciences Institute and Innovation Center for Cell Signaling Network,Institutes of Biology and Medical Sciences
[2] Soochow University,Department of Molecular Cell Biology, Cancer Genomics Centre Netherlands
[3] Leiden University Medical Center,Faculty of Basic Medical Sciences
[4] Chonqing Medical University,Department of Pharmaceutical Chemistry and the Cardiovascular Research Institute
[5] University of California San Francisco,undefined
来源
Nature Immunology | 2018年 / 19卷
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摘要
Malignancies can compromise innate immunity, but the mechanisms of this are largely unknown. Here we found that, via tumor-derived exosomes (TEXs), cancers were able to transfer activated epidermal growth factor receptor (EGFR) to host macrophages and thereby suppress innate antiviral immunity. Screening of the human kinome identified the kinase MEKK2 in macrophages as an effector of TEX-delivered EGFR that negatively regulated the antiviral immune response. In the context of experimental tumor implantation, MEKK2-deficient mice were more resistant to viral infection than were wild-type mice. Injection of TEXs into mice reduced innate immunity, increased viral load and increased morbidity in an EGFR- and MEKK2-dependent manner. MEKK2 phosphorylated IRF3, a transcription factor crucial for the production of type I interferons; this triggered poly-ubiquitination of IRF3 and blocked its dimerization, translocation to the nucleus and transcriptional activity after viral infection. These findings identify a mechanism by which cancer cells can dampen host innate immunity and potentially cause patients with cancer to become immunocompromised.
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页码:233 / 245
页数:12
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