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Tumor-Derived Retinoic Acid Regulates Intratumoral Monocyte Differentiation to Promote Immune Suppression

Authors :
Malay Haldar
T.S. Karin Eisinger-Mathason
Tsun Ki Jerrick To
Li Zhai
Gabrielle E. Ciotti
Mai Tu Dang
Irfan A. Asangani
Kristy L. Weber
Yuma Tada
Graham P. Lobel
Samir Devalaraja
Minghong Li
M. Celeste Simon
Ian W. Folkert
Zahidul Alam
Konstantin Budagyan
Ramakrishnan Natesan
Source :
Cell. 180(6)
Publication Year :
2019

Abstract

Summary The immunosuppressive tumor microenvironment (TME) is a major barrier to immunotherapy. Within solid tumors, why monocytes preferentially differentiate into immunosuppressive tumor-associated macrophages (TAMs) rather than immunostimulatory dendritic cells (DCs) remains unclear. Using multiple murine sarcoma models, we find that the TME induces tumor cells to produce retinoic acid (RA), which polarizes intratumoral monocyte differentiation toward TAMs and away from DCs via suppression of DC-promoting transcription factor Irf4. Genetic inhibition of RA production in tumor cells or pharmacologic inhibition of RA signaling within TME increases stimulatory monocyte-derived cells, enhances T cell-dependent anti-tumor immunity, and synergizes with immune checkpoint blockade. Furthermore, an RA-responsive gene signature in human monocytes correlates with an immunosuppressive TME in multiple human tumors. RA has been considered as an anti-cancer agent, whereas our work demonstrates its tumorigenic capability via myeloid-mediated immune suppression and provides proof of concept for targeting this pathway for tumor immunotherapy.

Details

ISSN :
10974172
Volume :
180
Issue :
6
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Cell
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....c45d350f31c3204c7080c8d132ff9918