Fucosylation is a post-translational modification of glycans, proteins, and lipids that is responsible for many biological processes. Fucose conjugation via α(1,2), α(1,3), α(1,4), α(1,6), and O’- linkages to glycans, and variations in fucosylation linkages, has important implications for cancer biology. This review focuses on the roles that fucosylation plays in cancer, specifically through modulation of cell surface proteins and signaling pathways. How L-fucose and serum fucosylation patterns might be used for future clinical diagnostic, prognostic, and therapeutic approaches will be discussed.
Increased HDAC8 activity deacetylates c-JUN, leading to increased EGFR signaling and BRAF inhibitor resistance Low HDAC8 activity RTK c-Jun High HDAC8 activity BRAFi c-Jun Ras RAF ERK Cell death Survival and invasion BRAFi Ras RAF ERK RTK (EGFR) ac ac ac TRE ac ac TRE p TR HDAC8 Melanoma cells have the ability to switch to a dedifferentiated, invasive phenotype in response to multiple stimuli. Here, we show that exposure of melanomas to multiple stresses including BRAF-MEK inhibitor therapy, hypoxia, and UV irradiation leads to an increase in histone deacetylase 8 (HDAC8) activity and the adoption of a drugresistant phenotype. Mass spectrometry-based phosphoproteomics implicated HDAC8 in the regulation of MAPK and AP-1 signaling. Introduction of HDAC8 into drug-na€ ve melanoma cells conveyed resistance both in vitro and in vivo. HDAC8mediated BRAF inhibitor resistance was mediated via receptor tyrosine kinase activation, leading to MAPK signaling. Although HDACs function at the histone level, they also regulate nonhistone substrates, and introduction of HDAC8 decreased the acetylation of c-Jun, increasing its transcriptional activity and enriching for an AP-1 gene signature. Mutation of the putative c-Jun acetylation site at lysine 273 increased transcriptional activation of c-Jun in melanoma cells and conveyed resistance to BRAF inhibition. In vivo xenograft studies confirmed the key role of HDAC8 in therapeutic adaptation, with both nonselective and HDAC8-specific inhibitors enhancing the durability of BRAF inhibitor therapy. Our studies demonstrate that HDAC8-specific inhibitors limit the adaptation of melanoma cells to multiple stresses including BRAF-MEK inhibition. Significance: This study provides evidence that HDAC8 drives transcriptional plasticity in melanoma cells in response to a range of stresses through direct deacetylation of c-Jun.
Immunotherapy efficacy is limited in melanoma, and combinations of immunotherapies with other modalities have yielded limited improvements but also adverse events requiring cessation of treatment. In addition to ineffective patient stratification, efficacy is impaired by paucity of intratumoral immune cells (itICs); thus, effective strategies to safely increase itICs are needed. We report that dietary administration of l-fucose induces fucosylation and cell surface enrichment of the major histocompatibility complex (MHC)-II protein HLA-DRB1 in melanoma cells, triggering CD4+ T cell-mediated increases in itICs and anti-tumor immunity, enhancing immune checkpoint blockade responses. Melanoma fucosylation and fucosylated HLA-DRB1 associate with intratumoral T cell abundance and anti-programmed cell death protein 1 (PD1) responder status in patient melanoma specimens, suggesting the potential use of melanoma fucosylation as a strategy for stratifying patients for immunotherapies. Our findings demonstrate that fucosylation is a key mediator of anti-tumor immunity and, importantly, suggest that l-fucose is a powerful agent for safely increasing itICs and immunotherapy efficacy in melanoma.
l‐fucose is a dietary sugar that is used by cells in a process called fucosylation to posttranslationally modify and regulate protein behavior and function. As fucosylation plays essential cellular functions in normal organ and immune developmental and homeostasis, it is perhaps not surprising that it has been found to be perturbed in a number of pathophysiological contexts, including cancer. Increasing studies over the years have highlighted key roles that altered fucosylation can play in cancer cell‐intrinsic as well as paracrine signaling and interactions. In particular, studies have demonstrated that fucosylation impact tumor:immunological interactions and significantly enhance or attenuate antitumor immunity. Importantly, fucosylation appears to be a posttranslational modification that can be therapeutically targeted, as manipulating the molecular underpinnings of fucosylation has been shown to be sufficient to impair or block tumor progression and to modulate antitumor immunity. Moreover, the fucosylation of anticancer agents, such as therapeutic antibodies, has been shown to critically impact their efficacy. In this review, we summarize the underappreciated roles that fucosylation plays in cancer and immune cells, as well as the fucosylation of therapeutic antibodies or the manipulation of fucosylation and their implications as new therapeutic modalities for cancer.
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