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Tumor-associated myeloid cells provide critical support for T-ALL

Authors :
George Georgiou
Seo Hee Nam
Aram Lyu
Hilary J. Selden
Chang-Han Lee
Wesley H. Godfrey
Lauren I.R. Ehrlich
Adviti Sarang
Todd A. Triplett
Dhivya Arasappan
Terzah M. Horton
Rachel Y. Ames
Zicheng Hu
Source :
Blood. 136:1837-1850
Publication Year :
2020
Publisher :
American Society of Hematology, 2020.

Abstract

Despite harboring mutations in oncogenes and tumor suppressors that promote cancer growth, T-cell acute lymphoblastic leukemia (T-ALL) cells require exogenous cells or signals to survive in culture. We previously reported that myeloid cells, particularly dendritic cells, from the thymic tumor microenvironment support the survival and proliferation of primary mouse T-ALL cells in vitro. Thus, we hypothesized that tumor-associated myeloid cells would support T-ALL in vivo. Consistent with this possibility, in vivo depletion of myeloid cells results in a significant reduction in leukemia burden in multiple organs in 2 distinct mouse models of T-ALL and prolongs survival. The impact of the myeloid compartment on T-ALL growth is not dependent on suppression of antitumor T-cell responses. Instead, myeloid cells provide signals that directly support T-ALL cells. Transcriptional profiling, functional assays, and acute in vivo myeloid-depletion experiments identify activation of IGF1R as a critical component of myeloid-mediated T-ALL growth and survival. We identify several myeloid subsets that have the capacity to directly support survival of T-ALL cells. Consistent with mouse models, myeloid cells derived from human peripheral blood monocytes activate IGF1R and directly support survival of primary patient T-ALL cells in vitro. Furthermore, enriched macrophage gene signatures in published clinical samples correlate with inferior outcomes for pediatric T-ALL patients. Collectively, these data reveal that tumor-associated myeloid cells provide signals critical for T-ALL growth in multiple organs in vivo and implicate tumor-associated myeloid cells and associated signals as potential therapeutic targets.

Details

ISSN :
15280020 and 00064971
Volume :
136
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Blood
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....4b8746cfd2b9313a83ccd0b6e8f4d9e9
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1182/blood.2020007145