4.6 Article

IL-12 rapidly alters the functional profile of tumor-associated and tumor-infiltrating macrophages in vitro and in vivo

Journal

JOURNAL OF IMMUNOLOGY
Volume 178, Issue 3, Pages 1357-1362

Publisher

AMER ASSOC IMMUNOLOGISTS
DOI: 10.4049/jimmunol.178.3.1357

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  1. NCI NIH HHS [CA100656] Funding Source: Medline

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Tumor-associated macrophages (TAMs) play a major role in promoting tumor growth and metastasis and in suppressing the antitumor immune response. Despite the immunosuppressive environment created by the tumor and enforced by tumor-associated macrophages, treatment of tumor-bearing mice with IL-12 induces tumor regression associated with appearance of activated NK cells and activated tumor-specific CTLs. We therefore tested the hypothesis that IL-12 treatment could alter the function of these tumor-associated suppressor macrophages. Analysis of tumor-infiltrating macrophages and distal TAMs revealed that IL-12, both in vivo and in vitro, induced a rapid (< 90 min) reduction of tumor supportive macrophage activities (IL-10, MCP-1, migration inhibitory factor, and TGF beta production) and a concomitant increase in proinflammatory and proimmunogenic activities (TNF-alpha, IL-15, and IL-18 production). Similar shifts in functional phenotype were induced by IL-12 in tumor-infiltrating macrophages isolated from the primary tumor mass and in TAMs isolated from lung containing metastases, spleen, and peritoneal cavity. Therefore, although TAMs display a strongly polarized immunosuppressive functional profile, they retain the ability to change their functional profile to proinflammatory activities given the appropriate stimulus. The ability of IL-12 to initiate this functional conversion may contribute to earl amplification of the subsequent destructive antitumor immune response.

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