Dendritic cell-elicited B-cell activation fosters immune privilege via IL-10 signals in hepatocellular carcinoma

Fang‐Zhu Ouyang(Sun Yat-sen University), Ruiqi Wu(Sun Yat-sen University), Wei Yuan(Sun Yat-sen University), Ruixian Liu(Sun Yat-sen University), Dong Yang(Sun Yat-sen University), Christos Xiao(Sun Yat-sen University), Limin Zheng(Sun Yat-sen University), Bo Li(Sun Yat-sen University), Xiang‐Ming Lao(Sun Yat-sen University), Dong‐Ming Kuang(Sun Yat-sen University)
Nature Communications
November 17, 2016
Cited by 101Open Access
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Abstract

Abstract B cells are prominent components of human solid tumours, but activation status and functions of these cells in human cancers remain elusive. Here we establish that over 50% B cells in hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) exhibit an FcγRII low/− activated phenotype, and high infiltration of these cells positively correlates with cancer progression. Environmental semimature dendritic cells, but not macrophages, can operate in a CD95L-dependent pathway to generate FcγRII low/− activated B cells. Early activation of monocytes in cancer environments is critical for the generation of semimature dendritic cells and subsequent FcγRII low/− activated B cells. More importantly, the activated FcγRII low/− B cells from HCC tumours, but not the resting FcγRII high B cells, without external stimulation suppress autologous tumour-specific cytotoxic T-cell immunity via IL-10 signals. Collectively, generation of FcγRII low/− activated B cells may represent a mechanism by which the immune activation is linked to immune tolerance in the tumour milieu.


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