4.8 Article

CNS-Native Myeloid Cells Drive Immune Suppression in the Brain Metastatic Niche through Cxcl10

Journal

CELL
Volume 183, Issue 5, Pages 1234-+

Publisher

CELL PRESS
DOI: 10.1016/j.cell.2020.09.064

Keywords

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Funding

  1. NIH [R01 CA194697-01, R01 CA222405-01A1]
  2. Notre Dame CRND Catalyst Award
  3. NIH CTSI core facility pilot grants
  4. NSF [CCF-1617735]

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Brain metastasis (br-met) develops in an immunologically unique br-met niche. Central nervous system-native myeloid cells (CNS-myeloids) and bone-marrow-derived myeloid cells (BMDMs) cooperatively regulate brain immunity, The phenotypic heterogeneity and specific roles of these myeloid subsets in shaping the br-met niche to regulate br-met outgrowth have not been fully revealed, Applying multimodal singlecell analyses, we elucidated a heterogeneous but spatially defined CNS-myeloid response during br-met outgrowth. We found Ccr2(+) BMDMs minimally influenced br-met while CNS-myeloid promoted br-met outgrowth. Additionally, br-met-associated CNS-myeloid exhibited downregulation of Cx3cr1. Cx3cr1 knockout in CNS-myeloid increased br-met incidence, leading to an enriched interferon response signature and Cxcl10 upregulation. Significantly, neutralization of Cxcl10 reduced br-met, while rCxcl10 increased brmet and recruited VISTA(Hi) PD-L1(+) CNS-myeloid to br-met lesions. Inhibiting VISTA- and PD-L1-signaling relieved immune suppression and reduced br-met burden. Our results demonstrate that loss of Cx3cr1 in CNS-myeloid triggers a Cxcl10-mediated vicious cycle, cultivating a br-met-promoting, immune-suppressive niche.

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