Lymph node colonization induces tumor-immune tolerance to promote distant metastasis
Author(s) -
Nathan E. Reticker-Flynn,
Weiruo Zhang,
Julia A. Belk,
Pamela A. Basto,
Nichole K. Escalante,
Genay Pilarowski,
Alborz Bejnood,
Maria M. Martins,
Justin A. Kenkel,
Ian L. Linde,
Sreya Bagchi,
Robert Yuan,
Serena Chang,
Matthew H. Spitzer,
Yaron Carmi,
Jiahan Cheng,
Lorna Tolentino,
Okmi Choi,
Nancy Wu,
Christina S. Kong,
Andrew J. Gentles,
John B. Sunwoo,
Ansuman T. Satpathy,
Sylvia K. Plevritis,
Edgar G. Engleman
Publication year - 2022
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.2022.04.019
Subject(s) - biology , melanoma , metastasis , immune system , cancer research , cancer , immunology , lymph node , colonization , immunotherapy , microbiology and biotechnology , genetics
For many solid malignancies, lymph node (LN) involvement represents a harbinger of distant metastatic disease and, therefore, an important prognostic factor. Beyond its utility as a biomarker, whether and how LN metastasis plays an active role in shaping distant metastasis remains an open question. Here, we develop a syngeneic melanoma mouse model of LN metastasis to investigate how tumors spread to LNs and whether LN colonization influences metastasis to distant tissues. We show that an epigenetically instilled tumor-intrinsic interferon response program confers enhanced LN metastatic potential by enabling the evasion of NK cells and promoting LN colonization. LN metastases resist T cell-mediated cytotoxicity, induce antigen-specific regulatory T cells, and generate tumor-specific immune tolerance that subsequently facilitates distant tumor colonization. These effects extend to human cancers and other murine cancer models, implicating a conserved systemic mechanism by which malignancies spread to distant organs.
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