作者
Jiang Li,Yingying Ye,Zhihan Liu,Guoyang Zhang,Huiqi Dai,Jiaqian Li,Boxuan Zhou,Yihong Li,Qiyi Zhao,Jingying Huang,Jingwei Feng,Shu Liu,Peigang Ruan,Jinjing Wang,Jiang Liu,Min Huang,Xinwei Liu,Shubin Yu,Ziyang Liang,Liping Ma,Xiaoxia Gou,Guoliang Zhang,Nian Chen,Yiwen Lu,Can Di,Qi‐Dong Xia,Jiayao Pan,Ru Feng,Qingqing Cai,Shicheng Su
摘要
Phagocytosis is required for the optimal efficacy of many approved and promising therapeutic antibodies for various malignancies. However, the factors that determine the response to therapies that rely on phagocytosis remain largely elusive. Here, we demonstrate that mitochondrial fission in macrophages induced by multiple antibodies is essential for phagocytosis of live tumor cells. Tumor cells resistant to phagocytosis inhibit mitochondrial fission of macrophages by overexpressing glutamine-fructose-6-phosphate transaminase 2 (GFPT2), which can be targeted to improve antibody efficacy. Mechanistically, increased cytosolic calcium by mitochondrial fission abrogates the phase transition of the Wiskott–Aldrich syndrome protein (WASP)–Wiskott–Aldrich syndrome interacting protein (WIP) complex and enables protein kinase C-θ (PKC-θ) to phosphorylate WIP during phagocytosis. GFPT2-mediated excessive use of glutamine by tumor cells impairs mitochondrial fission and prevents access of PKC-θ to compartmentalized WIP in macrophages. Our data suggest that mitochondrial dynamics dictate the phase transition of the phagocytic machinery and identify GFPT2 as a potential target to improve antibody therapy.