Recognition of tumor cells by Dectin-1 orchestrates innate immune cells for anti-tumor responses

S Chiba, H Ikushima, H Ueki, H Yanai, Y Kimura… - Elife, 2014 - elifesciences.org
S Chiba, H Ikushima, H Ueki, H Yanai, Y Kimura, S Hangai, J Nishio, H Negishi, T Tamura…
Elife, 2014elifesciences.org
The eradication of tumor cells requires communication to and signaling by cells of the
immune system. Natural killer (NK) cells are essential tumor-killing effector cells of the innate
immune system; however, little is known about whether or how other immune cells
recognize tumor cells to assist NK cells. Here, we show that the innate immune receptor
Dectin-1 expressed on dendritic cells and macrophages is critical to NK-mediated killing of
tumor cells that express N-glycan structures at high levels. Receptor recognition of these …
The eradication of tumor cells requires communication to and signaling by cells of the immune system. Natural killer (NK) cells are essential tumor-killing effector cells of the innate immune system; however, little is known about whether or how other immune cells recognize tumor cells to assist NK cells. Here, we show that the innate immune receptor Dectin-1 expressed on dendritic cells and macrophages is critical to NK-mediated killing of tumor cells that express N-glycan structures at high levels. Receptor recognition of these tumor cells causes the activation of the IRF5 transcription factor and downstream gene induction for the full-blown tumoricidal activity of NK cells. Consistent with this, we show exacerbated in vivo tumor growth in mice genetically deficient in either Dectin-1 or IRF5. The critical contribution of Dectin-1 in the recognition of and signaling by tumor cells may offer new insight into the anti-tumor immune system with therapeutic implications.
DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.7554/eLife.04177.001
eLife