Cell Reports (Nov 2024)

Extracellular vesicle-packaged PD-L1 impedes macrophage-mediated antibacterial immunity in preexisting malignancy

  • He-Jing Zhang,
  • Lingxin Zhu,
  • Qi-Hui Xie,
  • Lin-Zhou Zhang,
  • Jin-Yuan Liu,
  • Yang-Ying-Fan Feng,
  • Zhuo-Kun Chen,
  • Hou-Fu Xia,
  • Qiu-Yun Fu,
  • Zi-Li Yu,
  • Gang Chen

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 43, no. 11
p. 114903

Abstract

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Summary: Malignancies can compromise systemic innate immunity, but the underlying mechanisms are largely unknown. Here, we find that tumor-derived small extracellular vesicles (sEVs; TEVs) deliver PD-L1 to host macrophages, thereby impeding antibacterial immunity. Mice implanted with Rab27a-knockdown tumors are more resistant to bacterial infection than wild-type controls. Injection of TEVs into mice impairs macrophage-mediated bacterial clearance, increases systemic bacterial dissemination, and enhances sepsis score in a PD-L1-dependent manner. Mechanistically, TEV-packaged PD-L1 inhibits Bruton’s tyrosine kinase/PLCγ2 signaling-mediated cytoskeleton reorganization and reactive oxygen species generation, impacting bacterial phagocytosis and killing by macrophages. Neutralizing PD-L1 markedly normalizes macrophage-mediated bacterial clearance in tumor-bearing mice. Importantly, circulating sEV PD-L1 levels in patients with tumors can predict bacterial infection susceptibility, while patients with tumors treated with αPD-1 exhibit fewer postoperative infections. These findings identify a mechanism by which cancer cells dampen host innate immunity-mediated bacterial clearance and suggest targeting TEV-packaged PD-L1 to reduce bacterial infection susceptibility in tumor-bearing conditions.

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