Researchers in the lab of chemist Han Xiao at Rice University have identified a promising new immunological pathway to treat stubborn bone tumors, one of most prevalent forms of metastases in breast cancer patients.
"More than 70% of people with metastatic breast cancer will see the cancer cells move to bone, which can lead to skeletal-related events like bone pain, fractures, and hypercalcemia," said Yixian Wang, a Rice graduate student in the Han lab who is a lead author on a study published in Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences.
"There are now several immunotherapies that can potentially benefit breast cancer patients with metastases, but they aren't effective in patients with bone tumors."
Each year, more than 240,000 new cases of breast cancer are diagnosed in the United States, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. Approximately one-quarter of those patients will experience metastasis, where cancer cells spread from the breast to other parts of the body.
New immunotherapies called checkpoint inhibitors can uncloak stubborn tumors, allowing the immune system to send in powerful immune cells to deal with the abnormal cells. But while checkpoint inhibitors are effective for many patients, they do not work for everyone—and clinical trials have shown little to no response when used to treat bone metastases.
Xiao, associate professor of chemistry, biosciences, and bioengineering at Rice, said he and his team wanted to find another pathway that might be more effective in obliterating these stubborn bone metastases.
"We thought there must be another novel checkpoint axis we could target for the breast cancer cells in bone," Xiao said. "And we discovered a unique glyco-immune checkpoint axis in bone metastases that involves a protein called sialic acid-binding Ig-like lectin (Siglec)-15. We learned that it suppresses immune cells in the bone."
After noting that there was a significant upregulation of Siglec-15 in the tumor microenvironment in bone tumor samples from breast cancer patients, Xiao and colleagues demonstrated that this receptor plays an important role in hiding bone tumors from the immune surveillance.
"Current FDA-approved checkpoint inhibitors are mediated by protein-protein interactions that suppress immune cells," Xiao explained. "Siglec-15, however, is a glyco-immune checkpoint inhibitor. Instead of binding to a protein, Siglec-15 binds to the sugars you find on the cell surfaces—and that's how it can suppress the immune system. This is an entirely new type of immune checkpoint that offers great promise for future treatment for bone cancers."
Xiao's team conducted several cell culture experiments to study Siglec-15 interactions in the bone tumor microenvironment. They learned it is involved in crosstalk between tumor cells and important immune cells like T-cells and macrophages, as well as bone-specific cells, osteoclasts.
"You can find these glycolipids and glycoproteins on all cells—and we know they play an important role in immune modulation," added Xiao. "These findings offer us an opportunity to study these glyco-immune checkpoint inhibitors more in depth and identify those that can help bone tumors stop evading immune recognition."
More information: Yixian Wang et al, Siglec-15/sialic acid axis as a central glyco-immune checkpoint in breast cancer bone metastasis, Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences (2024). DOI: 10.1073/pnas.2312929121
Citation: Study unlocks new immunological pathway for treating breast cancer bone metastases (2024, January 24) retrieved 24 January 2024 from https://medicalxpress.com/news/2024-01-immunological-pathway-breast-cancer-bone.html
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