The Journal of Clinical Investigation (Mar 2022)

An Asia-specific variant of human IgG1 represses colorectal tumorigenesis by shaping the tumor microenvironment

  • Bing Yang,
  • Zhen Zhang,
  • Xiangjun Chen,
  • Xu-Yan Wang,
  • Shishang Qin,
  • Liaoqi Du,
  • Changjiang Yang,
  • Liyu Zhu,
  • Wenbo Sun,
  • Yongjie Zhu,
  • Qinwen Zheng,
  • Shidong Zhao,
  • Quan Wang,
  • Long Zhao,
  • Yilin Lin,
  • Jinghe Huang,
  • Fan Wu,
  • Lu Lu,
  • Fei Wang,
  • Wenjie Zheng,
  • Xiao-Hua Zhou,
  • Xiaozhen Zhao,
  • Ziye Wang,
  • Sun Xiao-Lin,
  • Yingjiang Ye,
  • Shan Wang,
  • Zhanguo Li,
  • Hai Qi,
  • Zemin Zhang,
  • Dong-Ming Kuang,
  • Lei Zhang,
  • Zhanlong Shen,
  • Wanli Liu

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 132, no. 6

Abstract

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Emerging studies have focused on ways to treat cancers by modulating T cell activation. However, whether B cell receptor signaling in the tumor microenvironment (TME) can be harnessed for immunotherapy is unclear. Here, we report that an Asia-specific variant of human IgG1 containing a Gly396 to Arg396 substitution (hIgG1-G396R) conferred improved survival of patients with colorectal cancer (CRC). Mice with knockin of the murine functional homolog mIgG2c-G400R recapitulated the alleviated tumorigenesis and progression in murine colon carcinoma models. Immune profiling of the TME revealed broad mobilizations of IgG1+ plasma cells, CD8+ T cells, CD103+ DCs, and active tertiary lymphoid structure formation, suggesting an effective antitumor microenvironment in hIgG1-G396R CRC patients. Mechanistically, this variant potentiated tumor-associated antigen–specific (TAA-specific) plasma cell differentiation and thus antibody production. These elevated TAA-specific IgG2c antibodies in turn efficiently boosted the antibody-dependent tumor cell phagocytosis and TAA presentation to effector CD8+ T cells. Notably, adoptive transfer of TAA-specific class-switched memory B cells harboring this variant exhibited therapeutic efficacy in murine tumor models, indicating their clinical potential. All these results prompted a prospective investigation of hIgG1-G396R in patients with CRC as a biomarker for clinical prognosis and demonstrated that manipulating the functionality of IgG1+ memory B cells in tumors could improve immunotherapy outcomes.

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