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Extracellular matrix educates a tumor macrophage phenotype found in ovarian cancer metastasis

Authors :
E. H. Puttock
E. J. Tyler
M. Manni
E. Maniati
C. Butterworth
E. Peerani
P. Hirani
V. Gauthier
Y. Liu
G. Maniscalco
V. Rajeeve
P. Cutillas
C. Trevisan
M. Pozzobon
M. Lockley
J. Rastrick
H. Läubli
A. White
O. M. T. Pearce
Publication Year :
2022
Publisher :
Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory, 2022.

Abstract

Recent studies have shown the tumor extracellular matrix (ECM) associates with immunosuppression, and that targeting the ECM can improve immune infiltration and immunotherapy response. A question that remains is whether the ECM is directly educating the immune phenotypes seen in cancer. We identified a tumor-associated macrophage (TAM) population correlated with poor prognosis, interruption of the cancer immunity cycle, and tumor ECM composition. To investigate whether ECM was capable of generating the TAM phenotype seen, we developed a decellularized tissue model that retains the native ECM architecture and composition. Macrophages cultured on decellularized ovarian metastasis shared transcriptional profiles with the TAMs found in human tissues. ECM educated macrophages have a tissue remodeling and immunoregulatory phenotype, inducing altered T cell function. We conclude that the tumor ECM is directly educating this macrophage population found in cancer tissues. Therefore, current and emerging cancer therapies that target the tumor ECM may be tailored to improve macrophage phenotype and their downstream regulation of immunity.

Details

Database :
OpenAIRE
Accession number :
edsair.doi...........f851f333a12fccfc1b608a79b087478f
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1101/2022.08.11.503568