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An immunoregulatory role for complement receptors in Murine Models of breast cancer

Md. Akhir, Fazrena Nadia and Mohd. Noor, Mohd. Hezmee and Leong, Keith Weng Kit and Nabizadeh, Jamileh A. and Manthey, Helga D. and Sonderegger, Stefan E. and Fung, Jenny Nga Ting and McGirr, Crystal E. and Shiels, Ian A. and Mills, Paul C. and Woodruff, Trent M. and Rolfe, Barbara E. (2021) An immunoregulatory role for complement receptors in Murine Models of breast cancer. Antibodies, 10 (1). pp. 1-12. ISSN 2073-4468

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Official URL: http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/antib10010002

Abstract

The complement system has demonstrated roles in regulating tumor growth, although these may differ between tumor types. The current study used two murine breast cancer models (EMT6 and 4T1) to investigate whether pharmacological targeting of receptors for complement proteins C3a (C3aR) and C5a (C5aR1) is protective in murine breast cancer models. In contrast to prior studies in other tumor models, treatment with the selective C5aR1 antagonist PMX53 had no effect on tumor growth. However, treatment of mice with a dual C3aR/C5aR1 agonist (YSFKPMPLaR) significantly slowed mammary tumor development and progression. Examination of receptor expression by quantitative polymerase chain reaction (qPCR) analysis showed very low levels of mRNA expression for either C3aR or C5aR1 by EMT6 or 4T1 mammary carcinoma cell lines compared with the J774 macrophage line or bone marrow-derived macrophages. Moreover, flow cytometric analysis found no evidence of C3aR or C5aR1 protein expression by either EMT6 or 4T1 cells, leading us to hypothesize that the tumor inhibitory effects of the dual agonist are indirect, possibly via regulation of the anti-tumor immune response. This hypothesis was supported by flow cytometric analysis of tumor infiltrating leukocyte populations, which demonstrated a significant increase in T lymphocytes in mice treated with the C3aR/C5aR1 agonist. These results support an immunoregulatory role for complement receptors in primary murine mammary carcinoma models. They also suggest that complement activation peptides can influence the anti-tumor response in different ways depending on the cancer type, the host immune response to the tumor and levels of endogenous complement activation within the tumor microenvironment.

Item Type:Article
Uncontrolled Keywords:complement C3a, complement receptors, mammary carcinoma
Subjects:T Technology > T Technology (General)
Divisions:Malaysia-Japan International Institute of Technology
ID Code:96125
Deposited By: Widya Wahid
Deposited On:04 Jul 2022 03:37
Last Modified:04 Jul 2022 03:37

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