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      IgE Activates Monocytes from Cancer Patients to Acquire a Pro-Inflammatory Phenotype

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          Abstract

          Simple Summary

          When activated by tumour antigen-specific IgEs, monocytes may contribute to the restriction of cancer growth in animal models of cancer. In this study, we investigated the effects of IgE stimulation on the activation state of human monocytes from healthy subjects and from patients with cancer. Cross-linking of cognate Fc receptors by IgE on human monocytes potentiated: (a) upregulation of activatory and down regulation of regulatory monocyte cell surface markers; (b) phosphorylation of intracellular protein kinases in monocytes previously described to be downstream of the mast cell and basophil FcεRI signalling pathway; (c) ovarian cancer patient monocyte-mediated cytotoxic killing of tumour cells and release of pro-inflammatory mediators, potentially associated with favourable patient survival. IgE can therefore activate human monocytes to acquire a pro-inflammatory phenotype capable of mediating effector functions against tumour cells. This may contribute to the mechanism of cancer immunotherapy using IgE antibodies.

          Abstract

          IgE contributes to host-protective functions in parasitic and bacterial infections, often by monocyte and macrophage recruitment. We previously reported that monocytes contribute to tumour antigen-specific IgE-mediated tumour growth restriction in rodent models. Here, we investigate the impact of IgE stimulation on monocyte response, cellular signalling, secretory and tumour killing functions. IgE cross-linking on human monocytes with polyclonal antibodies to mimic formation of immune complexes induced upregulation of co-stimulatory (CD40, CD80, CD86), and reduced expression of regulatory (CD163, CD206, MerTK) monocyte markers. Cross-linking and tumour antigen-specific IgE antibody-dependent cellular cytotoxicity (ADCC) of cancer cells by cancer patient-derived monocytes triggered release of pro-inflammatory mediators (TNFα, MCP-1, IL-10, CXCL-10, IL-1β, IL-6, IL-23). High intratumoural gene expression of these mediators was associated with favourable five-year overall survival in ovarian cancer. IgE cross-linking of trimeric FcεRI on monocytes stimulated the phosphorylation of intracellular protein kinases widely reported to be downstream of mast cell and basophil tetrameric FcεRI signalling. These included recently-identified FcεRI pathway kinases Fgr, STAT5, Yes and Lck, which we now associate with monocytes. Overall, anti-tumour IgE can potentiate pro-inflammatory signals, and prime tumour cell killing by human monocytes. These findings will inform the development of IgE monoclonal antibody therapies for cancer.

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          ReactomePA: an R/Bioconductor package for reactome pathway analysis and visualization.

          Reactome is a manually curated pathway annotation database for unveiling high-order biological pathways from high-throughput data. ReactomePA is an R/Bioconductor package providing enrichment analyses, including hypergeometric test and gene set enrichment analyses. A functional analysis can be applied to the genomic coordination obtained from a sequencing experiment to analyze the functional significance of genomic loci including cis-regulatory elements and non-coding regions. Comparison among different experiments is also supported. Moreover, ReactomePA provides several visualization functions to produce highly customizable, publication-quality figures. The source code and documents of ReactomePA are freely available through Bioconductor (http://www.bioconductor.org/packages/ReactomePA).
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            Monocyte differentiation and antigen-presenting functions

            Monocytes not only serve as precursors for macrophages, but also contribute to tissue immunity by presenting antigen to T cells and producing immunomodulatory mediators. In this Review, the authors discuss some of these less well-appreciated immune functions of monocytes.
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              GO::TermFinder--open source software for accessing Gene Ontology information and finding significantly enriched Gene Ontology terms associated with a list of genes.

              GO::TermFinder comprises a set of object-oriented Perl modules for accessing Gene Ontology (GO) information and evaluating and visualizing the collective annotation of a list of genes to GO terms. It can be used to draw conclusions from microarray and other biological data, calculating the statistical significance of each annotation. GO::TermFinder can be used on any system on which Perl can be run, either as a command line application, in single or batch mode, or as a web-based CGI script. The full source code and documentation for GO::TermFinder are freely available from http://search.cpan.org/dist/GO-TermFinder/.
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                Author and article information

                Journal
                Cancers (Basel)
                Cancers (Basel)
                cancers
                Cancers
                MDPI
                2072-6694
                15 November 2020
                November 2020
                : 12
                : 11
                : 3376
                Affiliations
                [1 ]St. John’s Institute of Dermatology, School of Basic & Medical Biosciences, King’s College London, Tower Wing, 9th Floor, Guy’s Hospital, London SE1 9RT, UK; mano.nakamura@ 123456kcl.ac.uk (M.N.); gabriel.osborn@ 123456kcl.ac.uk (G.O.); roman.laddach@ 123456kcl.ac.uk (R.L.); jitesh.chauhan@ 123456kcl.ac.uk (J.C.); chara.stavraka@ 123456kcl.ac.uk (C.S.); sara.lombardi@ 123456gstt.nhs.uk (S.L.); anna.black@ 123456gstt.nhs.uk (A.B.); AXK1104@ 123456student.bham.ac.uk (A.K.); duaa.khair@ 123456ouh.nhs.uk (D.O.K.); heather.bax@ 123456kcl.ac.uk (H.J.B.); debra.josephs@ 123456gstt.nhs.uk (D.H.J.); katie.lacy@ 123456gstt.nhs.uk (K.E.L.)
                [2 ]Department of Informatics, Faculty of Natural & Mathematical Sciences, King’s College London, London WC2B 4BG, UK; elmira.amiri@ 123456kcl.ac.uk (E.A.S.); sophia.tsoka@ 123456kcl.ac.uk (S.T.)
                [3 ]School of Cancer & Pharmaceutical Sciences, King’s College London, Guy’s Hospital, London SE1 9RT, UK; james.spicer@ 123456kcl.ac.uk
                [4 ]Biomarker Unit, Department of Applied Research and Technology Development, Fondazione, IRCCS Istituto Nazionale dei Tumouri Milano, 20133 Milan, Italy; mariangela.figini@ 123456istitutotumori.mi.it
                [5 ]Department of Medical Oncology and Clinical Oncology, Guy’s and St Thomas’ NHS Foundation Trust, London SE1 9RT, UK; anna.winship@ 123456gstt.nhs.uk (A.W.); sharmistha.ghosh@ 123456gstt.nhs.uk (S.G.); ana.montes@ 123456gstt.nhs.uk (A.M.)
                [6 ]Breast Cancer Now Research Unit, School of Cancer & Pharmaceutical Sciences, King’s College London, Guy’s Cancer Centre, London SE1 9RT, UK
                Author notes
                [* ]Correspondence: sophia.karagiannis@ 123456kcl.ac.uk ; Tel.: +44-(0)20-7188-6355
                Author information
                https://orcid.org/0000-0002-0699-6799
                https://orcid.org/0000-0001-7623-299X
                https://orcid.org/0000-0001-9001-8754
                https://orcid.org/0000-0003-0432-4160
                https://orcid.org/0000-0001-9694-9197
                https://orcid.org/0000-0002-4100-7810
                Article
                cancers-12-03376
                10.3390/cancers12113376
                7698027
                33203088
                6cace30a-a324-4291-a9e0-f0ba91c07968
                © 2020 by the authors.

                Licensee MDPI, Basel, Switzerland. This article is an open access article distributed under the terms and conditions of the Creative Commons Attribution (CC BY) license ( http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).

                History
                : 11 September 2020
                : 12 November 2020
                Categories
                Article

                ige,monocytes,fcεri,cancer,cancer immunotherapy,allergooncology,cytotoxicity,cross-linking

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