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IFNγ-Dependent Tissue-Immune Homeostasis Is Co-opted in the Tumor Microenvironment
Author(s) -
Christopher J. Nirschl,
Mayte SuárezFariñas,
Benjamin Izar,
Sanjay M. Prakadan,
Ruth Dannenfelser,
Itay Tirosh,
Yong Liu,
Qian Zhu,
K. Sanjana P. Devi,
Shaina L. Carroll,
David Chau,
Melika Rezaee,
TaeGyun Kim,
Ruiqi Huang,
Judilyn FuentesDuculan,
George X. SongZhao,
Nicholas Gulati,
Michelle A. Lowes,
Sandra L. King,
Francisco J. Quintana,
Young-Suk Lee,
James G. Krueger,
Kavita Y. Sarin,
Charles H. Yoon,
Levi A. Garraway,
Aviv Regev,
Alex K. Shalek,
Olga G. Troyanskaya,
Niroshana Anandasabapathy
Publication year - 2017
Publication title -
cell
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 26.304
H-Index - 776
eISSN - 1097-4172
pISSN - 0092-8674
DOI - 10.1016/j.cell.2017.06.016
Subject(s) - biology , homeostasis , immune system , immunology , tumor microenvironment , cytokine , immunity , microbiology and biotechnology , melanoma , acquired immune system , t cell , cancer research
Homeostatic programs balance immune protection and self-tolerance. Such mechanisms likely impact autoimmunity and tumor formation, respectively. How homeostasis is maintained and impacts tumor surveillance is unknown. Here, we find that different immune mononuclear phagocytes share a conserved steady-state program during differentiation and entry into healthy tissue. IFNγ is necessary and sufficient to induce this program, revealing a key instructive role. Remarkably, homeostatic and IFNγ-dependent programs enrich across primary human tumors, including melanoma, and stratify survival. Single-cell RNA sequencing (RNA-seq) reveals enrichment of homeostatic modules in monocytes and DCs from human metastatic melanoma. Suppressor-of-cytokine-2 (SOCS2) protein, a conserved program transcript, is expressed by mononuclear phagocytes infiltrating primary melanoma and is induced by IFNγ. SOCS2 limits adaptive anti-tumoral immunity and DC-based priming of T cells in vivo, indicating a critical regulatory role. These findings link immune homeostasis to key determinants of anti-tumoral immunity and escape, revealing co-opting of tissue-specific immune development in the tumor microenvironment.

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