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Senescence-induced immune remodeling facilitates metastatic adrenal cancer in a sex-dimorphic manner.

Kate M WardeLorenzo J SmithLihua LiuChris J StubbenBrian K LohmanParker W WillettJulia L AmmerGuadalupe Castaneda-HernandezSikiru O ImodoyeChenge ZhangKara D JonesKimber Converso-BaranH Atakan EkizMarc BarryMichael R ClayKatja Kiseljak-VassiliadesThomas J GiordanoGary D HammerKaitlin J Basham
Published in: Nature aging (2023)
Aging markedly increases cancer risk, yet our mechanistic understanding of how aging influences cancer initiation is limited. Here we demonstrate that the loss of ZNRF3, an inhibitor of Wnt signaling that is frequently mutated in adrenocortical carcinoma, leads to the induction of cellular senescence that remodels the tissue microenvironment and ultimately permits metastatic adrenal cancer in old animals. The effects are sexually dimorphic, with males exhibiting earlier senescence activation and a greater innate immune response, driven in part by androgens, resulting in high myeloid cell accumulation and lower incidence of malignancy. Conversely, females present a dampened immune response and increased susceptibility to metastatic cancer. Senescence-recruited myeloid cells become depleted as tumors progress, which is recapitulated in patients in whom a low myeloid signature is associated with worse outcomes. Our study uncovers a role for myeloid cells in restraining adrenal cancer with substantial prognostic value and provides a model for interrogating pleiotropic effects of cellular senescence in cancer.
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