Neutrophils and Snail Orchestrate the Establishment of a Pro-tumor Microenvironment in Lung Cancer
Author(s) -
Julien Faget,
Svenja Groeneveld,
Gaël Boivin,
Martial Sankar,
Nadine Zangger,
Miguel Garcia,
Nicolas Guex,
Inti Zlobec,
Loïc Steiner,
Alessandra Piersigilli,
Ioannis Xénarios,
Etienne Meylan
Publication year - 2017
Publication title -
cell reports
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 6.264
H-Index - 154
eISSN - 2639-1856
pISSN - 2211-1247
DOI - 10.1016/j.celrep.2017.11.052
Subject(s) - tumor microenvironment , snail , biology , cxcl2 , immune system , cancer research , angiogenesis , tumor progression , lung cancer , immunology , secretion , metastasis , chemokine , cancer , medicine , pathology , chemokine receptor , ecology , biochemistry , genetics
Understanding the immune compartment of tumors facilitates the development of revolutionary new therapies. We used a Kras(G12D)-driven mouse model of lung cancer to establish an immune signature and identified a contribution of Gr1 + neutrophils to disease progression. Depletion experiments showed that Gr1 + cells (1) favor tumor growth, (2) reduce T cell homing and prevent successful anti-PD1 immunotherapy, and (3) alter angiogenesis, leading to hypoxia and sustained Snail expression in lung cancer cells. In turn, Snail accelerated disease progression and increased intratumoral Cxcl2 secretion and neutrophil infiltration. Cxcl2 was produced mainly by neutrophils themselves in response to a factor secreted by Snail-expressing tumor cells. We therefore propose a vicious cycle encompassing neutrophils and Snail to maintain a deleterious tumor microenvironment.
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