1. Academic Validation
  2. Effects of B cell-activating factor on tumor immunity

Effects of B cell-activating factor on tumor immunity

  • JCI Insight. 2020 May 21;5(10):e136417. doi: 10.1172/jci.insight.136417.
Mark Yarchoan Won Jin Ho Aditya Mohan Yajas Shah Teena Vithayathil James Leatherman Lauren Dennison Neeha Zaidi Sudipto Ganguly Skylar Woolman Kayla Cruz Todd D Armstrong Elizabeth M Jaffee
Abstract

Immunotherapies that modulate T cell function have been firmly established as a pillar of Cancer therapy, whereas the potential for B cells in the antitumor immune response is less established. B cell-activating factor (BAFF) is a B cell-activating cytokine belonging to the TNF ligand family that has been associated with autoimmunity, but little is known about its effects on Cancer immunity. We find that BAFF upregulates multiple B cell costimulatory molecules; augments IL-12a expression, consistent with Be-1 lineage commitment; and enhances B cell antigen-presentation to CD4+ Th cells in vitro. In a syngeneic mouse model of melanoma, BAFF upregulates B cell CD40 and PD-L1 expression; it also modulates T cell function through increased T cell activation and TH1 polarization, enhanced expression of the proinflammatory leukocyte trafficking chemokine CCR6, and promotion of a memory phenotype, leading to enhanced antitumor immunity. Similarly, adjuvant BAFF promotes a memory phenotype of T cells in vaccine-draining lymph nodes and augments the antitumor efficacy of whole cell vaccines. BAFF also has distinct immunoregulatory functions, promoting the expansion of CD4+Foxp3+ Tregs in the spleen and tumor microenvironment (TME). Human melanoma data from The Cancer Genome Atlas (TCGA) demonstrate that BAFF expression is positively associated with overall survival and a TH1/IFN-γ gene signature. These data support a potential role for BAFF signaling as a Cancer Immunotherapy.

Keywords

B cells; Cancer immunotherapy; Immunology; Oncology.

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