4.8 Article

Myeloid-derived suppressor cell development is regulated by a STAT/IRF-8 axis

Journal

JOURNAL OF CLINICAL INVESTIGATION
Volume 123, Issue 10, Pages 4464-4478

Publisher

AMER SOC CLINICAL INVESTIGATION INC
DOI: 10.1172/JCI68189

Keywords

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Funding

  1. NCI Cancer Center Support Grant [R01 CA016056]
  2. National Cancer Institute/NIH [R01 CA140622, R01 CA133085, R01 CA168512-DRP1]
  3. Alliance Developmental Award from the Roswell Park Alliance Foundation
  4. NIH [T32CA085183]

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Myeloid-derived suppressor cells (MDSCs) comprise immature myeloid populations produced in diverse pathologies, including neoplasia. Because MDSCs can impair antitumor immunity, these cells have emerged as a significant barrier to cancer therapy. Although much research has focused on how MDSCs promote tumor progression, it remains unclear how MDSCs develop and why the MDSC response is heavily granulocytic. Given that MDSCs are a manifestation of aberrant myelopoiesis, we hypothesized that MDSCs arise from perturbations in the regulation of interferon regulatory factor-8 (IRF-8), an integral transcriptional component of myeloid differentiation and lineage commitment. Overall, we demonstrated that (a) Irf8-deficient mice generated myeloid populations highly homologous to tumor-induced MDSCs with respect to phenotype, function, and gene expression profiles; (b) IRF-8 overexpression in mice attenuated MDSC accumulation and enhanced immunotherapeutic efficacy; (c) the MDSC-inducing factors G-CSF and GM-CSF facilitated IRF-8 downregulation via STAT3- and STAT5-dependent pathways; and (d) IRF-8 levels in MDSCs of breast cancer patients declined with increasing MDSC frequency, implicating IRF-8 as a negative regulator in human MDSC biology. Together, our results reveal a previously unrecognized role for IRF-8 expression in MDSC subset development, which may provide new avenues to target MDSCs in neoplasia.

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