Scientific Reports (May 2024)

Ganglioside SSEA-4 in Ewing sarcoma marks a tumor cell population with aggressive features and is a potential cell-surface immune target

  • Silke Jamitzky,
  • Bianca Altvater,
  • Carolin Krekeler,
  • Laura Hoen,
  • Caroline Brandes,
  • Julia Ebbinghaus,
  • Lisa Richter,
  • Lisa Kosel,
  • Laurin Ochs,
  • Nicole Farwick,
  • Katja Urban,
  • Lena Kluge,
  • Lara Bücker,
  • Dennis Görlich,
  • Ian C. D. Johnston,
  • Rita Pfeifer,
  • Wolfgang Hartmann,
  • Claudia Rossig,
  • Sareetha Kailayangiri

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1038/s41598-024-62849-8
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 14, no. 1
pp. 1 – 14

Abstract

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Abstract Carbohydrate markers of immature cells during prenatal human development can be aberrantly expressed in cancers and deserve evaluation as immune targets. A candidate target in Ewing sarcoma is the globo-series ganglioside stage-specific embryonic antigen-4 (SSEA-4). We detected SSEA-4 expression on the cell surface of all of 14 EwS cell lines and in 21 of 31 (68%) primary EwS tumor biopsies. Among paired subpopulations of tumor cells with low versus high SSEA-4 expression, SSEA-4high expression was significantly and consistently associated with functional characteristics of tumor aggressiveness, including higher cell proliferation, colony formation, chemoresistance and propensity to migrate. SSEA-4low versus SSEA-4high expression was not related to expression levels of the EWSR1-FLI1 fusion transcript or markers of epithelial/mesenchymal plasticity. SSEA-4low cells selected from bulk populations regained higher SSEA-4 expression in vitro and during in vivo tumor growth in a murine xenograft model. T cells engineered to express SSEA-4-specific chimeric antigen receptors (CARs) specifically interacted with SSEA-4 positive EwS cells and exerted effective antigen-specific tumor cell lysis in vitro. In conclusion, with its stable expression and functional significance in EwS, SSEA-4 is an attractive therapeutic immune target in this cancer that deserves further evaluation for clinical translation.