Cancer-Associated Fibroblasts-Derived Exosomes Suppress Immune Cell Function in Breast Cancer via the miR-92/PD-L1 Pathway

In this study, human breast cancer-derived CAFs were cultured, and CAF-derived exosomes in a culture medium were isolated. Using a miRNA profiles assay, we identify a significantly higher level of microRNA-92 isolated in CAFs exosomes. After treatment by CAF-derived exosomes, breast cancer cells express higher programmed cell death receptor ligand 1 (PD-L1), accompanied with increased miR-92 expression. Increased PD-L1 expression, which was induced by CAF-derived exosomes, significantly promotes apoptosis and impaired proliferation of T cells. The underlying mechanism of this effect was studied, proliferation and migration of breast cancer cells were increased after the transfection of miR-92, LATS2 was recognized as a target gene of miR-92, and further confirmed by a luciferase assay. Immunoprecipitation showed that LATS2 can interact with YAP1, chromatin immunoprecipitation confirmed that after nuclear translocation YAP1 could bind to the enhancer region of PD-L1 to promotes transcription activity. Furthermore, the animal study confirmed that CAFs significantly promoted tumor progression and impaired the function of tumor-infiltrated immune cells in vivo. Our data revealed a novel mechanism that can induce immune suppression in the tumor microenvironment.
Source: Frontiers in Immunology - Category: Allergy & Immunology Source Type: research