Abstract
The phospholipid scramblases Xkr8 and TMEM16F externalize phosphatidylserine (PS) by distinct mechanisms. Xkr8 is activated by caspase-mediated proteolytic cleavage and, in synergy with the inactivation of P4-ATPase flippases, results in the irreversible externalization of PS on apoptotic cells and an "eat-me" signal for efferocytosis. In contrast, TMEM16F is a calcium-activated scramblase that reversibly externalizes PS on viable cells via the transient increase in intracellular calcium in live cells. The tumor microenvironment (TME) is abundant with exposed PS, resulting from prolonged oncogenic and metabolic stresses and high apoptotic indexes of tumors. Such chronic PS externalization in the TME has been linked to host immune evasion from interactions of PS with inhibitory PS receptors, such as TAM and TIM family receptors. Here, in an effort to better understand the contributions of apoptotic vs live cell PS-externalization to tumorigenesis and immune evasion, we employed an EO771 orthotopic breast cancer model and genetically ablated Xkr8 and TMEM16F using CRISPR/Cas9. While neither the knockout of Xkr8 nor TMEM16F showed defects in cell intrinsic properties related to proliferation, tumor-sphere formation, and growth factor signaling, both knockouts suppressed tumorigenicity in immune-competent mice, but not in NOD/SCID or RAG-knockout immune-deficient strains. Mechanistically, Xkr8-KO tumors suppressed macrophage-mediated efferocytosis, and TMEM16F-KO suppressed ER stress/calcium-induced PS externalization. Our data support an emerging idea in immune-oncology that constitutive PS externalization, mediated by scramblase dysregulation on tumor cells, supports immune evasion in the tumor microenvironment. This links apoptosis/efferocytosis and oncogenic stress involving calcium dysregulation, contributing to PS-mediated immune escape and cancer progression.
