Abstract

Abstract Background: Methods to perturb tumor-associated myeloid cell function are being actively pursued to overcome these challenges in immunotherapy and search for a cure. CD11b is a potential therapeutic target to modulate suppressive myeloid derived cells and induce tumor-reactive T-cell responses. However, CD11b can bind to multiple carbohydrate ligands that trigger a variety of myeloid cell functions like adhesion, migration, and even phagocytosis and proliferation. This has created a major challenge to understand the molecular basis by which CD11b converts differences in receptor-ligand binding into subsequent immune signaling responses, and to use this knowledge for therapeutic development. Methods: This study investigated a previously reported carbohydrate ligand, BG34-200, that showed anti-tumor effect through modulating CD11b+ cells. Applying modern approaches of peptide microarray, multi-parameter FACS analysis, cellular/molecular immunological technology, advanced microscopic imaging, and transgenic mouse models of solid cancers, we studied the BG34-200-CD11b carbohydrate-protein engagement and immunological changes it triggered in the context of solid cancers including osteosarcoma, melanoma and pancreatic cancer. Results: Our results show that BG34-200 can mediate direct, specific, multi-site and multivalent binding to integrin CD11b to trigger cellular differentiation in a suppressive tumor-associated myeloid cell subset. In melanoma, osteosarcoma, and pancreatic cancer, we detected this rare myeloid cell subset in blood, which displayed an inflammatory monocyte phenotype and exhibited immunosuppressive behavior. BG34-200-CD11b engagement could induce differentiation of these tumor-associated inflammatory monocytes into dendritic cells by inducing phagocytosis that effectively trigger F-actin cytoskeletal rearrangement and intrinsic ICAM-1 clustering important for antigen presentation and effector T cell stimulation. Conclusions: Our findings improve understanding of molecular basis by which CD11b converts difference in carbohydrate ligands into subsequent immune signaling responses, may lead to development of safe and novel therapies modulating myeloid derived cell function for immunotherapy of solid cancers. Citation Format: Mei Zhang. Carbohydrate-CD11b engagement enhances differentiation of tumor-associated myeloid cells in immunotherapy of solid cancers. [abstract]. In: Proceedings of the American Association for Cancer Research Annual Meeting 2023; Part 1 (Regular and Invited Abstracts); 2023 Apr 14-19; Orlando, FL. Philadelphia (PA): AACR; Cancer Res 2023;83(7_Suppl):Abstract nr 4420.

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