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Hacking macrophage-associated immunosuppression for regulating glioblastoma angiogenesis

Authors :
Matija Snuderl
Raymond W. Lam
Xin Cui
Weiyi Qian
Jean Pierre Gagner
Haoyu Wang
Renee Tyler Tan Morales
Luisa Cimmino
Igor Dolgalev
David Zagzag
Weiqiang Chen
Dimitris G. Placantonakis
Source :
Biomaterials
Publication Year :
2017

Abstract

Glioblastoma (GBM) is the most lethal primary adult brain tumor and its pathology is hallmarked by distorted neovascularization, diffuse tumor-associated macrophage infiltration, and potent immunosuppression. Reconstituting organotypic tumor angiogenesis models with biomimetic cell heterogeneity and interactions, pro-/anti-inflammatory milieu and extracellular matrix (ECM) mechanics is critical for preclinical anti-angiogenic therapeutic screening. However, current in vitro systems do not accurately mirror in vivo human brain tumor microenvironment. Here, we engineered a three-dimensional (3D), microfluidic angiogenesis model with controllable and biomimetic immunosuppressive conditions, immune-vascular and cell-matrix interactions. We demonstrate in vitro, GL261 and CT-2A GBM-like tumors steer macrophage polarization towards a M2-like phenotype for fostering an immunosuppressive and proangiogenic niche, which is consistent with human brain tumors. We distinguished that GBM and M2-like immunosuppressive macrophages promote angiogenesis, while M1-like pro-inflammatory macrophages suppress angiogenesis, which we coin “inflammation-driven angiogenesis.” We observed soluble immunosuppressive cytokines, predominantly TGF-β1, and surface integrin (α(v)β(3)) endothelial-macrophage interactions are required in inflammation-driven angiogenesis. We demonstrated tuning cell-adhesion receptors using an integrin (α(v)β(3))-specific collagen hydrogel regulated inflammation-driven angiogenesis through Src-PI3K-YAP signaling, highlighting the importance of altered cell-ECM interactions in inflammation. To validate the preclinical applications of our 3D organoid model and mechanistic findings of inflammation-driven angiogenesis, we screened a novel dual integrin (α(v)β(3)) and cytokine receptor (TGFβ-R1) blockade that suppresses GBM tumor neovascularization by simultaneously targeting macrophage-associated immunosuppression, endothelial-macrophage interactions, and altered ECM. Hence, we provide an interactive and controllable GBM tumor microenvironment and highlight the importance of macrophage-associated immunosuppression in GBM angiogenesis, paving a new direction of screening novel anti-angiogenic therapies.

Details

ISSN :
18785905
Volume :
161
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Biomaterials
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....d8d40840392d62fbae2879e4970c8b0a