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Abstract LB344: Complement-mediated signaling during cross-presentation of tumor antigen augments T cell responses

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Production of complement C3a and C5a locally at the immune synapse by activated dendritic cells (DCs) enhances T cell responses in multiple experimental models. Complement signaling through cognate C3a receptor… Click to show full abstract

Production of complement C3a and C5a locally at the immune synapse by activated dendritic cells (DCs) enhances T cell responses in multiple experimental models. Complement signaling through cognate C3a receptor (C3aR) and C5a receptor (C5aR) modulate effector T cell stability, proliferation and differentiation. We have previously shown that complement C3 plays a mechanistic role in driving synergistic anti-tumor effects of blocking indoleamine 2,3-dioxygenase (IDO) during radiation and chemotherapy in a murine brain tumor model that expresses the gp10025-33 peptide antigen. We hypothesize that, when anti-tumor responses are allowed to happen, complement C3 production by local DCs acts as a costimulation factor, operating through C3aR and C5aR on the T cell surface to allow optimal T cell activation and proliferation. To study the role of complement C3 as a costimulation factor during T cell responses against a nominal tumor antigen (gp10025-33 peptide, expressed by B16F10 melanoma), we used T cells from syngeneic pmel-1 mice (TCR transgenic with CD8 T cells that recognize the cross-presented gp10025-33 peptide) co-cultured with gp10025-33 peptide and dendritic cells from either wild-type (WT) or C3-defiecient (C3-KO) mice. In addition, we used in vitro culture conditions where gp10025-33 tumor peptide was in stringent limited supply to model homeostatic conditions of the tumor microenvironment. We found that, when stimulated by DCs from C3-KO mice, pmel-1 CD8 T cells had decreased activation marker expression, proliferation, and cytokine effector function relative to stimulation by DCs from WT mice. Next, we bred pmel-1 mice onto a syngeneic background deficient in receptors for both C3a and C5a complement factors (C3aR-KO/C5aR-KO double knock-out mice). We used CD8 T cells from the resulting mouse strain (pmel-1/C3aR-KO/C5aR-KO) co-cultured with WT DCs to study the role of complement signaling in T cells during responses to tumor antigen. Using the same stringent antigen conditions, CD8 T cells from the pmel-1/C3aR-KO/C5aR-KO mice had decreased activation marker expression and proliferation, and differences in cytokine function compared to CD8 T cells from the pmel-1 mice. These findings suggest that lack of local complement production by the DCs in the tumor microenvironment may inhibit anti-tumor immune responses, and that complement signaling through C3aR and C5aR on T cells may play an important role during such anti-tumor responses. Citation Format: Caryn L. Bird, Gabriela A. Pacholczyk, Theodore S. Johnson. Complement-mediated signaling during cross-presentation of tumor antigen augments T cell responses [abstract]. In: Proceedings of the American Association for Cancer Research Annual Meeting 2023; Part 2 (Clinical Trials and Late-Breaking Research); 2023 Apr 14-19; Orlando, FL. Philadelphia (PA): AACR; Cancer Res 2023;83(8_Suppl):Abstract nr LB344.

Keywords: cell responses; complement; tumor antigen; mice; tumor

Journal Title: Cancer Research
Year Published: 2023

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