Cell Softness Prevents Cytolytic T-cell Killing of Tumor-Repopulating Cells

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Abstract

Biomechanics is a fundamental feature of a cell. However, the manner by which actomysin tension affects tumor immune evasion remains unclear. Here we show that although cytotoxic T lymphocytes (CTL) can effectively destroy stiff differentiated tumor cells, they fail to kill soft tumor-repopulating cells (TRC). TRC softness prevented membrane pore formation caused by CTL-released perforin. Perforin interacting with nonmuscle myosin heavy-chain 9 transmitted forces to less F-actins in soft TRC, thus generating an inadequate contractile force for perforin pore formation. Stiffening TRC allowed perforin the ability to drill through the membrane, leading to CTL-mediated killing of TRC. Importantly, overcoming mechanical softness in human TRC also enhanced TRC cell death caused by human CTL, potentiating a mechanics-based immunotherapeutic strategy. These findings reveal a mechanics-mediated tumor immune evasion, thus potentially providing an alternative approach for tumor immunotherapy. Significance: Tumor-repopulating cells evade CD8þ cytolytic T-cell killing through a mechanical softness mechanism, underlying the impediment of perforin pore formation at the immune synapse site.

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APA

Liu, Y., Zhang, T., Zhang, H., Li, J., Zhou, N., Fiskesund, R., … Huang, B. (2021). Cell Softness Prevents Cytolytic T-cell Killing of Tumor-Repopulating Cells. Cancer Research, 81(2), 476–488. https://doi.org/10.1158/0008-5472.CAN-20-2569

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