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Chromosomal instability induced in cancer can enhance macrophage-initiated immune responses that include anti-tumor IgG.

Authors :
Hayes BH
Wang M
Zhu H
Phan SH
Dooling LJ
Andrechak JC
Chang AH
Tobin MP
Ontko NM
Marchena T
Discher DE
Source :
ELife [Elife] 2024 May 28; Vol. 12. Date of Electronic Publication: 2024 May 28.
Publication Year :
2024

Abstract

Solid tumors generally exhibit chromosome copy number variation, which is typically caused by chromosomal instability (CIN) in mitosis. The resulting aneuploidy can drive evolution and associates with poor prognosis in various cancer types as well as poor response to T-cell checkpoint blockade in melanoma. Macrophages and the SIRPĪ±-CD47 checkpoint are understudied in such contexts. Here, CIN is induced in poorly immunogenic B16F10 mouse melanoma cells using spindle assembly checkpoint MPS1 inhibitors that generate persistent micronuclei and diverse aneuploidy while skewing macrophages toward a tumoricidal 'M1-like' phenotype based on markers and short-term anti-tumor studies. Mice bearing CIN-afflicted tumors with wild-type CD47 levels succumb similar to controls, but long-term survival is maximized by SIRPĪ± blockade on adoptively transferred myeloid cells plus anti-tumor monoclonal IgG. Such cells are the initiating effector cells, and survivors make de novo anti-cancer IgG that not only promote phagocytosis of CD47-null cells but also suppress tumor growth. CIN does not affect the IgG response, but pairing CIN with maximal macrophage anti-cancer activity increases durable cures that possess a vaccination-like response against recurrence.<br />Competing Interests: BH, MW, HZ, SP, LD, JA, AC, MT, NO, TM, DD No competing interests declared<br /> (© 2023, Hayes et al.)

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
2050-084X
Volume :
12
Database :
MEDLINE
Journal :
ELife
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
38805560
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.7554/eLife.88054