Siglec-7 and Siglec-9 expression in primary triple negative and oestrogen receptor positive breast cancer and in vitro signalling.
Publication year
2024Source
Clinical & Translational Immunology, 13, 9, (2024), pp. e1524, article e1524ISSN
Annotation
01 september 2024
Publication type
Article / Letter to editor
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Organization
Radiation Oncology
Journal title
Clinical & Translational Immunology
Volume
vol. 13
Issue
iss. 9
Page start
p. e1524
Subject
Radiation Oncology - Radboud University Medical CenterAbstract
OBJECTIVES: PD-1/PD-L1 immune checkpoint blockade can be an effective treatment for advanced breast cancer patients. However, patients with oestrogen receptor positive (ER+) tumors often display only low lymphocyte infiltration, while a large part of triple negative (TN) breast tumors does not generate an effective immunotherapy response. Therefore, new treatment strategies have to be developed. Here, we investigate Siglec-7 and Siglec-9 as novel ITIM-bearing inhibitory immune checkpoint receptors similar to PD-1, but expressed on a broader range of immune cells. METHODS: We assessed Siglec-7 and Siglec-9 (ligand) expression in TN and ER+ breast cancer tumors and their breast cancer cell line-induced signalling. RESULTS: We report that Siglec-7 and Siglec-9 are highly expressed in TN tumors, and to a low extent in ER+ tumors. Siglec-7 was observed on myeloid cells, T cells, and NK cells and Siglec-9 preferentially on myeloid cells. Expression of sialoglycans, including Siglec-7 and Siglec-9 ligands, was observed in both TN and ER+ breast cancer tissue sections. Expression levels of Siglec-7 and Siglec-9 ligands were higher on in vitro cultured TN cell lines than ER+ cell lines. Importantly, by applying chimeric Siglec-7 reporter cells, we showed the induction of Siglec-7 signalling by multiple TN cell lines, but only by one ER+ cell line. Moreover, Siglec-7 signalling is directly related to Siglec-7 ligand expression levels of breast cancer cell lines. CONCLUSION: These data imply that immunotherapy targeting Siglec receptors may be particularly interesting for TN breast cancer patients not responding to current treatment strategies with tumors displaying high immune cell infiltration.
This item appears in the following Collection(s)
- Academic publications [243859]
- Electronic publications [130594]
- Faculty of Medical Sciences [92795]
- Open Access publications [104905]
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