Scientists Unravel Tumor-Infiltrating B Cell Function Diversity

Chinese Academy of Sciences

In a study published in Science on May 3, Prof. ZHANG Xiaoming at the Shanghai Institute of Immunity and Infection (SIII) of the Chinese Academy of Sciences, Prof. GAO Qiang and Prof. FAN Jia at Fudan University, and Prof. GUO Guoji at Zhejiang University, have unveiled two responding patterns of tumor-infiltraring B cells with therapeutic implications.

B cells have been long appreciated to be one important component of tumor-infiltrating lymphocytes, but whether they play a positive or negative role in anti-tumor immunity is highly controversial.

In this study, with comprehensive single-cell multiomic analyses of B cells across 20 cancer types, the researchers classified the tumor-infiltrating B cell responses into germinal center (GC)-like and extra-follicular (EF), with cancer type preference. They found that the EF B cell response was associated with immunosuppressive tumor microenvironment (TME) and unfavorable prognosis, and that the GC-like B cell response, on the contrary, was linked with a fertile anti-tumor immunity and favorable outcomes.

Besides, through extensive analyses, the researchers determined the molecular feature and the differentiation pathway of the atypical memory (AtM) B cells (also called age-associated B cells, ABCs), the key player in the EF B cell response. Intriguingly, they found that the differentiation of AtM B cell could be promoted by glutamine metabolism, and that the induced AtM B cells inhibited T cell functions and promoted Treg differentiation.

"It is unexpected that we identify a vicious role of AtM B cell within tumors, and this knowledge could open up new avenues for cancer immunotherapy by targeted dampening or depletion of AtM B cells," said Prof. ZHANG.

This study deepens the understanding of the heterogeneous roles of tumor-infiltrating B cells. It may provide new therapeutic opportunities for those cancer patients refractory to current immunotherapies, like hepatocellular carcinoma, which was dominated by EF B cell responses. With mechanistic insights and clinical validation, B cell-targeted therapies could complement other types of immunotherapies in the near future.

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