Macrophage-derived Fgl2 dampens antitumor immunity through regulation of FcγRIIB+CD8+ T cells in melanoma.

Publication date: Mar 24, 2025

Cancer immunotherapy has emerged as a promising therapeutic modality but heterogeneity in patient responsiveness remains. Thus, greater understanding of the immunologic factors that dictate response to immunotherapy is critical to improve patient outcomes. Here, we show that fibrinogen-like protein 2 (Fgl2) is elevated in the setting of melanoma in humans and mice and plays a functional role in inhibiting the CD8+ T cell response. Surprisingly, the tumor itself is not the major cellular source of Fgl2. Instead, we found that macrophage-secreted Fgl2 dampens the CD8+ T cell response through binding and apoptosis of FcγRIIB+CD8+ T cells. This regulation was CD8+ T cell autonomous and not via an antigen-presenting cell intermediary, as absence of Fcgr2b from the CD8+ T cells rendered T cells insensitive to Fgl2 regulation. Fgl2 is robustly expressed by macrophages in 10 cancer types in humans and in 6 syngeneic tumor models in mice, underscoring the clinical relevance of Fgl2 as a therapeutic target to promote T cell activity and improve patient immunotherapeutic response.

Concepts Keywords
Apoptosis Animals
Fcgr2b Cancer immunotherapy
Immunotherapeutic CD8-Positive T-Lymphocytes
Mice Cell Line, Tumor
Promising Female
FGL2 protein, human
Fgl2 protein, mouse
Fibrinogen
Fibrinogen
Humans
Immunology
Immunotherapy
Macrophages
Macrophages
Melanoma
Mice
Mice, Knockout
Oncology
Receptors, IgG
Receptors, IgG
T cells

Semantics

Type Source Name
disease MESH melanoma
pathway KEGG Melanoma
disease MESH Cancer
pathway REACTOME Apoptosis
disease MESH clinical relevance
drug DRUGBANK Fibrinogen Human

Original Article

(Visited 1 times, 1 visits today)

Leave a Comment

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *