SIRPγ-expressing cancer stem-like cells promote immune escape of lung cancer via Hippo signaling

Chuan Xu(Army Medical University), Guoxiang Jin(Army Medical University), Hong Wu(Army Medical University), Wei Cui(Shenyang Pharmaceutical University), Yuhui Wang(Wake Forest University), Rajesh Manne(Wake Forest University), Guihua Wang(Wake Forest University), Weina Zhang(Wake Forest University), Xian Zhang(Wake Forest University), Fei Han(Wake Forest University), Zhen Cai(Wake Forest University), Bo‐Syong Pan(Wake Forest University), Che-Chia Hsu(Wake Forest University), Yiqiang Liu(Sichuan Cancer Hospital), Anmei Zhang(Wake Forest University), Jie Long(Wake Forest University), Hongbo Zou(Army Medical University), Shuang Wang(Army Medical University), Xiaodan Ma(Sun Yat-sen University), Jin‐Ling Duan(Sun Yat-sen University), Bin Wang(Army Medical University), Weihui Liu(Sichuan Academy of Medical Sciences & Sichuan Provincial People's Hospital), Haitao Lan(Sichuan Academy of Medical Sciences & Sichuan Provincial People's Hospital), Qing Xiong(The University of Texas MD Anderson Cancer Center), Gang Xue(Wake Forest University), Zhong‐Zhu Chen(Chongqing University of Arts and Sciences), Zhigang Xu(Chongqing University of Arts and Sciences), Mark E. Furth(Atrium Health Wake Forest Baptist), Sarah Haigh Molina(Atrium Health Wake Forest Baptist), Yong Lu(Wake Forest University), Dan Xie(Sun Yat-sen University), Xiu‐Wu Bian(Army Medical University), Hui-Kuan Lin(Wake Forest University)
DOAJ (DOAJ: Directory of Open Access Journals)
March 1, 2022
Cited by 55Open Access
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Abstract

Cancer stem-like cells (CSLCs) acquire enhanced immune checkpoint responses to evade immune cell killing and promote tumor progression. Here we showed that signal regulatory protein γ (SIRPγ) determined CSLC properties and immune evasiveness in a small population of lung adenocarcinoma (LUAD) cancer cells. A SIRPγhi population displayed CSLC properties and transmitted the immune escape signal through sustaining CD47 expression in both SIRPγhi and SIRPγlo/– tumor cells. SIRPγ bridged MST1 and PP2A to facilitate MST1 dephosphorylation, resulting in Hippo/YAP activation and leading to cytokine release by CSLCs, which stimulated CD47 expression in LUAD cells and consequently inhibited tumor cell phagocytosis. SIRPγ promoted tumor growth and metastasis in vivo through YAP signaling. Notably, SIRPγ targeting with genetic SIRPγ knockdown or a SIRPγ-neutralizing antibody inhibited CSLC phenotypes and elicited phagocytosis that suppressed tumor growth in vivo. SIRPG was upregulated in human LUAD and its overexpression predicted poor survival outcome. Thus, SIRPγhi cells serve as CSLCs and tumor immune checkpoint–initiating cells, propagating the immune escape signal to the entire cancer cell population. Our study identifies Hippo/YAP signaling as the first mechanism by which SIRPγ is engaged and reveals that targeting SIRPγ represents an immune- and CSLC-targeting strategy for lung cancer therapy.


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