4.8 Article

Systemic dysfunction and plasticity of the immune macroenvironment in cancer models

Journal

NATURE MEDICINE
Volume 26, Issue 7, Pages 1125-+

Publisher

NATURE PORTFOLIO
DOI: 10.1038/s41591-020-0892-6

Keywords

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Funding

  1. National Institutes of Health (NIH) [DP5OD023056, P50CA097257]
  2. UCSF Program for Breakthrough Biomedical Research
  3. Parker Institute for Cancer Immunotherapy
  4. NIH [S10OD018040]
  5. European Research Council [ERC-2008-AdG 232997]

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Primary tumor presence and progression shape the systemic immune landscape and immune responses to pathogens in multiple murine tumor models. Understanding of the factors governing immune responses in cancer remains incomplete, limiting patient benefit. In this study, we used mass cytometry to define the systemic immune landscape in response to tumor development across five tissues in eight mouse tumor models. Systemic immunity was dramatically altered across models and time, with consistent findings in the peripheral blood of patients with breast cancer. Changes in peripheral tissues differed from those in the tumor microenvironment. Mice with tumor-experienced immune systems mounted dampened responses to orthogonal challenges, including reduced T cell activation during viral or bacterial infection. Antigen-presenting cells (APCs) mounted weaker responses in this context, whereas promoting APC activation rescued T cell activity. Systemic immune changes were reversed with surgical tumor resection, and many were prevented by interleukin-1 or granulocyte colony-stimulating factor blockade, revealing remarkable plasticity in the systemic immune state. These results demonstrate that tumor development dynamically reshapes the composition and function of the immune macroenvironment.

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