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Statins impair antitumor effects of rituximab by inducing conformational changes of CD20
Authors:Winiarska Magdalena  Bil Jacek  Wilczek Ewa  Wilczynski Grzegorz M  Lekka Malgorzata  Engelberts Patrick J  Mackus Wendy J M  Gorska Elzbieta  Bojarski Lukasz  Stoklosa Tomasz  Nowis Dominika  Kurzaj Zuzanna  Makowski Marcin  Glodkowska Eliza  Issat Tadeusz  Mrowka Piotr  Lasek Witold  Dabrowska-Iwanicka Anna  Basak Grzegorz W  Wasik Maria  Warzocha Krzysztof  Sinski Maciej  Gaciong Zbigniew  Jakobisiak Marek  Parren Paul W H I  Golab Jakub
Affiliation:Department of Immunology, Center of Biostructure Research, the Medical University of Warsaw, Warsaw, Poland.
Abstract:

Background

Rituximab is used in the treatment of CD20+ B cell lymphomas and other B cell lymphoproliferative disorders. Its clinical efficacy might be further improved by combinations with other drugs such as statins that inhibit cholesterol synthesis and show promising antilymphoma effects. The objective of this study was to evaluate the influence of statins on rituximab-induced killing of B cell lymphomas.

Methods and Findings

Complement-dependent cytotoxicity (CDC) was assessed by MTT and Alamar blue assays as well as trypan blue staining, and antibody-dependent cellular cytotoxicity (ADCC) was assessed by a 51Cr release assay. Statins were found to significantly decrease rituximab-mediated CDC and ADCC of B cell lymphoma cells. Incubation of B cell lymphoma cells with statins decreased CD20 immunostaining in flow cytometry studies but did not affect total cellular levels of CD20 as measured with RT-PCR and Western blotting. Similar effects are exerted by other cholesterol-depleting agents (methyl-β-cyclodextrin and berberine), but not filipin III, indicating that the presence of plasma membrane cholesterol and not lipid rafts is required for rituximab-mediated CDC. Immunofluorescence microscopy using double staining with monoclonal antibodies (mAbs) directed against a conformational epitope and a linear cytoplasmic epitope revealed that CD20 is present in the plasma membrane in comparable amounts in control and statin-treated cells. Atomic force microscopy and limited proteolysis indicated that statins, through cholesterol depletion, induce conformational changes in CD20 that result in impaired binding of anti-CD20 mAb. An in vivo reduction of cholesterol induced by short-term treatment of five patients with hypercholesterolemia with atorvastatin resulted in reduced anti-CD20 binding to freshly isolated B cells.

Conclusions

Statins were shown to interfere with both detection of CD20 and antilymphoma activity of rituximab. These studies have significant clinical implications, as impaired binding of mAbs to conformational epitopes of CD20 elicited by statins could delay diagnosis, postpone effective treatment, or impair anti-lymphoma activity of rituximab.
Keywords:
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