Abstract

Early lung carcinoma development may be modulated by innate host cellular mechanisms that promote tumor growth and invasion. We recently identified how a loss-of-function mutation in the glycan sulfating enzyme N-deacetylase/N-sulfotransferase-1 (Ndst1; involved in heparan sulfate biosynthesis) targeted to antigen presenting cells (APCs) may augment acquired anti-tumor T cell immune mechanisms. Crossing this mutation (Ndst1f/f CD11cCre+) onto a model of inducible spontaneous Kras mutant lung cancer [CCSP-rtTA; (tetO7) CMV-Kras-G12D] allowed us to examine how the APC mutation affects the formation and growth of early lung carcinoma. We examined early bronchocentric adenoma formation in the model, and the frequency of such events was significantly reduced on the mutant background. This was associated with significant reductions in tumor associated FOXP3+ cellular infiltration and CD163+ M2-type macrophage infiltration. The findings evolved prior to effector CD8+ T cell infiltration into tumors. The impact of this unique glycan under-sulfating mutation on inhibiting early Kras G12D mutant bronchocentric adenoma formation along with a cellular phenotype of inhibited tumor infiltration by cells involved in suppressive T-regulatory cell signaling (FOXP3+ cells) or tumor-permissive M2 macrophage functions (CD163+ cells) provides insight on how glycan targeting may modulate innate cellular mechanisms during early lung tumor development. The findings may also impact the future design of host-centered immunologic anti-tumor therapeutic strategies.

Highlights

  • Tumor formation may be subject to pressure or patterning by immune modulating cells

  • Spontaneous Kras-mutant lung carcinoma model demonstrates a lower frequency of early tumor foci in a setting of heparan sulfate (HS)-altered antigen presenting cells (APCs)

  • We generated an inducible model of Kras driven lung cancer, CCSP-rtTA; CMVKras-G12D [7] in the setting of mutation in a unique glycan sulfating biosynthetic enzyme

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Summary

Introduction

Tumor formation may be subject to pressure or patterning by immune modulating cells. Targeting unique molecular modifications to immune cells in this transformation microenvironment may influence this. Associated macrophage; TTBS, Tween tris buffered saline; Treg, Reagnutliagtoerny pTreceslel.nting cells carrying a CD11c driven mutation in the major cell-. Glycoscience Grant: K12 5K12HL141956 (to SYK and MMF); and additional NIH support (R01-GM32373 to NV). We acknowledge the Veterans Medical Research Foundation that has supported MMF. RR Conflicts of interest: The authors declare no competing interests. Received 3 September 2021; received in revised form September 2021; accepted September 2021.

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