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Tumoral Interferon Beta Induces an Immune-Stimulatory Phenotype in Tumor-Associated Macrophages in Melanoma Brain Metastases.
- Source :
-
Cancer research communications [Cancer Res Commun] 2024 Aug 01; Vol. 4 (8), pp. 2189-2202. - Publication Year :
- 2024
-
Abstract
- Type I interferons (IFN) are immune-stimulatory cytokines involved in antiviral and antitumor immune responses. They enhance the efficacy of immunogenic anticancer therapies such as radiotherapy by activating both innate and adaptive immune cells. Macrophages are one of the most abundant innate immune cells in the immune microenvironment of melanoma brain metastases (MBM) and can exert potent immune-suppressive functions. Here, we investigate the potential of tumoral type I IFNs to repolarize tumor-associated macrophages (TAM) in two murine MBM models and assess the effects of radiotherapy-induced type I IFN on TAMs in a transcriptomic MBM patient dataset. In mice, we describe a proinflammatory M1-like TAM phenotype induced by tumoral IFNβ and identify a myeloid type I IFN-response signature associated with a high M1/M2-like TAM ratio. Following irradiation, patients with MBM displaying a myeloid type I IFN-response signature showed increased overall survival, providing evidence that tumoral IFNβ supports an effective antitumor immune response by re-educating immune-regulatory TAM. These findings uncover type I IFN-inducing therapies as a potential macrophage-targeting therapeutic approach and provide a rationale for combining radiotherapy with concomitant immunotherapy to improve treatment response in patients with MBM.<br />Significance: Our study shows that re-education of tumor-associated macrophages by tumoral IFNβ translates into improved clinical outcome in patients with melanoma brain metastases, providing pathomechanistic insights into synergistic type I interferon-inducing therapies with immunotherapies and warranting investigation of IFNβ as a predictive biomarker for combined radioimmunotherapy.<br /> (©2024 The Authors; Published by the American Association for Cancer Research.)
- Subjects :
- Animals
Mice
Humans
Phenotype
Tumor Microenvironment immunology
Tumor Microenvironment drug effects
Mice, Inbred C57BL
Female
Cell Line, Tumor
Brain Neoplasms secondary
Brain Neoplasms immunology
Interferon-beta
Tumor-Associated Macrophages immunology
Tumor-Associated Macrophages drug effects
Melanoma immunology
Melanoma pathology
Melanoma drug therapy
Melanoma secondary
Subjects
Details
- Language :
- English
- ISSN :
- 2767-9764
- Volume :
- 4
- Issue :
- 8
- Database :
- MEDLINE
- Journal :
- Cancer research communications
- Publication Type :
- Academic Journal
- Accession number :
- 39056192
- Full Text :
- https://doi.org/10.1158/2767-9764.CRC-24-0024