Abstract 6628: Mapping the spatial and molecular determinants of macrophage heterogeneity in breast cancer

Nir Ben Chetrit,Xiang Niu,Jesus Sotelo,Ariel Swett, Vinagolu Rajasekhar, Maria Jiao,Caitlin Stewart,Priya Bhardwaj,Sanjay Kottapalli,Saravanan Ganesan, Pierre-Louis Loyher,Catherine Potenski,Kristy Brown, Neil M. Iyengar, Dilip D. Giri, Scott W. Lowe, John H. Healey, Frederic Geissmann,Irit Sagi,Johanna A. Joyce,Dan A. Landau

Cancer Research(2024)

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摘要
Abstract Tumor-infiltrating macrophages support critical steps in tumor progression, and their accumulation in the tumor microenvironment (TME) is associated with adverse outcomes and therapeutic resistance across human cancers. In the TME, macrophages adopt diverse phenotypic alterations, giving rise to heterogeneous immune activation states and induction of cell cycle. While the transcriptional profiles of these activation states are well-annotated across human cancers, the underlying signals that regulate macrophage heterogeneity and accumulation remain incompletely understood. Here, we leveraged a novel ex vivo organotypic TME (oTME) model of breast cancer, in vivo murine models, and human samples to map the determinants of functional heterogeneity of TME macrophages. We identified a subset of F4/80high Sca-1+ self-renewing macrophages maintained by type-I interferon (IFN) signaling and requiring physical contact with cancer-associated fibroblasts. We discovered that the contact-dependent self-renewal of TME macrophages is mediated via Notch4, and its inhibition abrogated tumor growth of breast and ovarian carcinomas in vivo, as well as lung dissemination in a PDX model of triple-negative breast cancer (TNBC). Through spatial multi-omic profiling of protein markers and transcriptomes, we found that the localization of macrophages further dictates functionally distinct but reversible phenotypes, regardless of their ontogeny. Whereas immune-stimulatory macrophages (CD11C+CD86+) populated the tumor epithelial nests, the stroma-associated macrophages (SAMs) were proliferative, immunosuppressive (Sca-1+CD206+PD-L1+), resistant to CSF-1R depletion, and associated with worse patient outcomes. Notably, following cessation of CSF-1R depletion, macrophages rebounded primarily to the SAM phenotype, which was associated with accelerated growth of mammary tumors. Our work reveals the spatial determinants of macrophage heterogeneity in breast cancer and highlights the disruption of macrophage self-renewal as a potential new therapeutic strategy. Citation Format: Nir Ben Chetrit, Xiang Niu, Jesus Sotelo, Ariel Swett, Vinagolu Rajasekhar, Maria Jiao, Caitlin Stewart, Priya Bhardwaj, Sanjay Kottapalli, Saravanan Ganesan, Pierre-Louis Loyher, Catherine Potenski, Kristy Brown, Neil M. Iyengar, Dilip D. Giri, Scott W. Lowe, John H. Healey, Frederic Geissmann, Irit Sagi, Johanna A. Joyce, Dan A. Landau. Mapping the spatial and molecular determinants of macrophage heterogeneity in breast cancer [abstract]. In: Proceedings of the American Association for Cancer Research Annual Meeting 2024; Part 1 (Regular Abstracts); 2024 Apr 5-10; San Diego, CA. Philadelphia (PA): AACR; Cancer Res 2024;84(6_Suppl):Abstract nr 6628.
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