International Journal of Molecular Sciences (May 2022)

Tumor Infiltration with CD20<sup>+</sup>CD73<sup>+</sup> B Cells Correlates with Better Outcome in Colorectal Cancer

  • Frederik J. Hansen,
  • Zhiyuan Wu,
  • Paul David,
  • Anke Mittelstädt,
  • Anne Jacobsen,
  • Malgorzata J. Podolska,
  • Kenia Ubieta,
  • Maximilian Brunner,
  • Dina Kouhestani,
  • Izabela Swierzy,
  • Lotta Roßdeutsch,
  • Bettina Klösch,
  • Isabella Kutschick,
  • Susanne Merkel,
  • Axel Denz,
  • Klaus Weber,
  • Carol Geppert,
  • Robert Grützmann,
  • Alan Bénard,
  • Georg F. Weber

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/ijms23095163
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 23, no. 9
p. 5163

Abstract

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Immunotherapy has become increasingly important in the treatment of colorectal cancer (CRC). Currently, CD73, also known as ecto-5′-nucleotidase (NT5E), has gained considerable interest as a potential therapeutic target. CD73 is one of the key enzymes catalyzing the conversion of extracellular ATP into adenosine, which in turn exerts potent immune suppressive effects. However, the role of CD73 expression on various cell types within the CRC tumor microenvironment remains unresolved. The expression of CD73 on various cell types has been described recently, but the role of CD73 on B-cells in CRC remains unclear. Therefore, we analyzed CD73 on B-cells, especially on tumor-infiltrating B-cells, in paired tumor and adjacent normal tissue samples from 62 eligible CRC patients. The highest expression of CD73 on tumor-infiltrating B-cells was identified on class-switched memory B-cells, followed by naive B-cells, whereas no CD73 expression was observed on plasmablasts. Clinicopathological correlation analysis revealed that higher CD73+ B-cells infiltration in the CRC tumors was associated with better overall survival. Moreover, metastasized patients showed a significantly decreased number of tumor-infiltrating CD73+ B-cells. Finally, neoadjuvant therapy correlated with reduced CD73+ B-cell numbers and CD73 expression on B-cells in the CRC tumors. As promising new immune therapies are being developed, the role of CD73+ B-cells and their subsets in the development of colorectal cancer should be further explored to find new therapeutic options.

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