Tumor cells often overexpress immune checkpoint proteins, including CD47, for immune evasion. However, whether or how oncogenic activation of receptor tyrosine kinases, which are crucial drivers in tumor development, regulates CD47 expression is unknown. Here, it is demonstrated that epidermal growth factor receptor (EGFR) activation induces CD47 expression by increasing the binding of c-Src to CD47, leading to c-Src-mediated CD47 Y288 phosphorylation. This phosphorylation inhibits the interaction between the ubiquitin E3 ligase TRIM21 and CD47, thereby abrogating TRIM21-mediated CD47 K99/102 polyubiquitylation and CD47 degradation. Knock-in expression of CD47 Y288F reduces CD47 expression, increases macrophage phagocytosis of tumor cells, and inhibits brain tumor growth in mice. In contrast, knock-in expression of CD47 K99/102R elicits the opposite effects compared to CD47 Y288F expression. Importantly, CD47-SIRPα blockade with an anti-CD47 antibody treatment significantly enhances EGFR-targeted cancer therapy. In addition, CD47 expression levels in human glioblastoma (GBM) specimens correlate with EGFR and c-Src activation and aggravation of human GBM. These findings elucidate a novel mechanism underlying CD47 upregulation in EGFR-activated tumor cells and underscore the role of the EGFR-c-Src-TRIM21-CD47 signaling axis in tumor evasion and the potential to improve the current cancer therapy with a combination of CD47 blockade with EGFR-targeted remedy.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/advs.202206380 | DOI Listing |
Alzheimers Dement
December 2024
University of California, San Francisco (UCSF), San Francisco, CA, USA.
Background: Microglia responses to Aβ and tau pathology and the dysregulation of the microglial role in synaptic function may determine the onset and course of Alzheimer's disease (AD). While significant work has been performed in mouse models, we still lack a complete understanding of physiological and pathological microglial states and functions in human AD brain.
Method: For immunoblotting of brain homogenates against multiple microglial markers, and flow cytometry (FC) analysis of synaptosomal fractions (SNAP25/CD47/Aβ(10G4)/phospho-tau(AT8)), 49 cryopreserved human parietal cortex samples were categorized into four groups: low pathology control (LPC), high Aβ control (HAC), high pathology control (HPC), and AD.
Alzheimers Dement
December 2024
Wake Forest Alzheimer's Disease Research Center, Winston-Salem, NC, USA.
Background: Western and Mediterranean diets differentially affect cerebral cortical gene expression, brain structure, and socioemotional behavior in middle-aged female nonhuman primates (NHP) (Macaca fascicularis). In this study, we investigate the effect of diet on brain molecular composition.
Method: Using a machine learning approach, we quantified the impact of these diets on the presynaptic proteome in the lateral temporal cortex determined by synaptometry by time of flight (SynTOF) mass spectrometry and examined associations between the proteome, transcriptome, and an array of multisystem phenotypes.
J Med Chem
January 2025
Department of Medicinal Chemistry, Shanghai Institute of Materia Medica, Chinese Academy of Sciences, Shanghai 201203, China.
Glutaminyl cyclases, including glutaminyl-peptide cyclotransferase (QPCT) and glutaminyl-peptide cyclotransferase-like protein (QPCTL), primarily catalyze the cyclization of N-terminal glutamine or glutamate to pyroglutamate (pGlu). QPCTL, in particular, modifies the N-terminus of CD47, thereby regulating its interaction with signal-regulatory protein alpha (SIRPα) and modulating phagocytosis of tumor cells by immune cells. Additionally, QPCTL cyclizes the N-termini of CCL2, CCL7, and CX3CL1, influencing the tumor microenvironment and inflammatory responses in cancer and other disorders.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFClin Transplant Res
December 2024
The Research Institute for Transplantation, Yonsei University College of Medicine, Seoul, Korea.
Foreign antigen recognition is the ability of immune cells to distinguish self from nonself, which is crucial for immune responses in both invertebrates and vertebrates. In vertebrates, T cells play a pivotal role in graft rejection by recognizing alloantigens presented by antigen-presenting cells through direct, indirect, or semidirect pathways. B cells also significantly contribute to the indirect presentation of antigens to T cells.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFFront Immunol
January 2025
Department of Medicine, Comprehensive Cancer Institute, Cedars-Sinai Medical Center, Los Angeles, CA, United States.
Transmembrane integrin-associated protein functions as a potent innate immunity checkpoint and is upregulated by many types of malignant cells, including melanoma during tumor progression. Binding of to its target receptor, SIRPα, on myeloid cell lineages leads to the initiation of the downstream signaling cascades that inhibit innate immunity anti-tumor responses. Molecular mechanisms underlying upregulation of during melanoma progression remain largely unknown.
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