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Mechanisms of Lymphoma Clearance Induced by High-Dose Alkylating Agents

Authors :
Lossos, Chen
Liu, Yunpeng
Kolb, Kellie E.
Christie, Amanda L.
Van Scoyk, Alexandria
Prakadan, Sanjay M.
Shigemori, Kay
Stevenson, Kristen E.
Morrow, Sara
Plana, Olivia D.
Fraser, Cameron
Jones, Kristen L.
Liu, Huiyun
Pallasch, Christian P.
Modiste, Rebecca
Craig, Jeffrey W.
Morgan, Elizabeth A.
Vega, Francisco
Aster, Jon C.
Sarosiek, Kristopher A.
Shalek, Alex K.
Hemann, Michael T.
Weinstock, David M.
Lossos, Chen
Liu, Yunpeng
Kolb, Kellie E.
Christie, Amanda L.
Van Scoyk, Alexandria
Prakadan, Sanjay M.
Shigemori, Kay
Stevenson, Kristen E.
Morrow, Sara
Plana, Olivia D.
Fraser, Cameron
Jones, Kristen L.
Liu, Huiyun
Pallasch, Christian P.
Modiste, Rebecca
Craig, Jeffrey W.
Morgan, Elizabeth A.
Vega, Francisco
Aster, Jon C.
Sarosiek, Kristopher A.
Shalek, Alex K.
Hemann, Michael T.
Weinstock, David M.
Publication Year :
2019

Abstract

The extraordinary activity of high-dose cyclophosphamide against some high-grade lymphomas was described nearly 60 years ago. Here we address mechanisms that mediate cyclophosphamide activity in bona fide human double-hit lymphoma. We show that antibody resistance within the bone marrow (BM) is not present upon early engraftment but develops during lymphoma progression. This resistance required a high tumor:macrophage ratio, was recapitulated in spleen by partial macrophage depletion, and was overcome by multiple, high-dose alkylating agents. Cyclophosphamide induced endoplasmic reticulum (ER) stress in BM-resident lymphoma cells in vivo that resulted in ATF4-mediated paracrine secretion of VEGFA, massive macrophage infiltration, and clearance of alemtuzumab-opsonized cells. BM macrophages isolated after cyclophosphamide treatment had increased phagocytic capacity that was reversed by VEGFA blockade or SYK inhibition. Single-cell RNA sequencing of these macrophages identified a super-phagocytic subset that expressed CD36/FCGR4. Together, these findings define a novel mechanism through which high-dose alkylating agents promote macrophage-dependent lymphoma clearance. SIGNIFICANCE: mAbs are effective against only a small subset of cancers. Herein, we recapitulate compartment-specific antibody resistance and define an ER stress-dependent mechanism induced by high-dose alkylating agents that promotes phagocytosis of opsonized tumor cells. This approach induces synergistic effects with mAbs and merits testing across additional tumor types.

Details

Database :
OAIster
Notes :
English
Publication Type :
Electronic Resource
Accession number :
edsoai.on1364907345
Document Type :
Electronic Resource