4.7 Article

Type 1 conventional dendritic cells are systemically dysregulated early in pancreatic carcinogenesis

Journal

JOURNAL OF EXPERIMENTAL MEDICINE
Volume 217, Issue 8, Pages -

Publisher

ROCKEFELLER UNIV PRESS
DOI: 10.1084/jem.20190673

Keywords

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Funding

  1. American Medical Association (Pancreatic Cancer Seed Grant)
  2. Parker Institute for Cancer Immunotherapy
  3. National Institutes of Health [R01 CA229803, P30 CA016520, P01 CA210944, T32 HL007439-41, R01 CA197916]
  4. Penn Pancreatic Cancer Research Center

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Type 1 conventional dendritic cells (cDC1s) are typically thought to be dysregulated secondarily to invasive cancer. Here, we report that cDC1 dysfunction instead develops in the earliest stages of preinvasive pancreatic intraepithelial neoplasia (PanIN) in the Kras(LSL-G12D/+) Trp53(LSL-R172H/+) Pdx1-Cre-driven (KPC) mouse model of pancreatic cancer. cDC1 dysfunction is systemic and progressive, driven by increased apoptosis, and results in suboptimal up-regulation of T cell-polarizing cytokines during cDC1 maturation. The underlying mechanism is linked to elevated IL-6 concomitant with neoplasia. Neutralization of IL-6 in vivo ameliorates cDC1 apoptosis, rescuing cDC1 abundance in tumor-bearing mice. CD8(+) T cell response to vaccination is impaired as a result of cDC1 dysregulation. Yet, combination therapy with CD40 agonist and Flt3 ligand restores cDC1 abundance to normal levels, decreases cDC1 apoptosis, and repairs cDC1 maturation to drive superior control of tumor outgrowth. Our study therefore reveals the unexpectedly early and systemic onset of cDC1 dysregulation during pancreatic carcinogenesis and suggests therapeutically tractable strategies toward cDC1 repair.

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