Tenascin-C Orchestrates an Immune-Suppressive Tumor Microenvironment in Oral Squamous Cell Carcinoma.
Caroline SpenléThomas LoustauDevadarssen MurdamoothooWilliam ErneStephanie Beghelli-de la Forest DivonneRomain VeberLuciana PettiPierre BourdelyMatthias MörgelinEva-Maria BrauchleGérard CremelVony RandrianarisoaAbdouramane CamaraSamah RekimaSébastien SchaubKelly NouhenThomas ImhofUwe HansenNicodème PaulChristine CarapitoNicolas PythoudAurélie HirschlerHélène DumortierChristopher G MuellerManuel KochKatja Schenke-LaylandShigeyuki KonAnne SudakaFabienne AnjuèreEllen Van Obberghen-SchillingGertraud OrendPublished in: Cancer immunology research (2020)
Inherent immune suppression represents a major challenge in the treatment of human cancer. The extracellular matrix molecule tenascin-C promotes cancer by multiple mechanisms, yet the roles of tenascin-C in tumor immunity are incompletely understood. Using a 4NQO-induced oral squamous cell carcinoma (OSCC) model with abundant and absent tenascin-C, we demonstrated that tenascin-C enforced an immune-suppressive lymphoid stroma via CCL21/CCR7 signaling, leading to increased metastatic tumors. Through TLR4, tenascin-C increased expression of CCR7 in CD11c+ myeloid cells. By inducing CCL21 in lymphatic endothelial cells via integrin α9β1 and binding to CCL21, tenascin-C immobilized CD11c+ cells in the stroma. Inversion of the lymph node-to-tumor CCL21 gradient, recruitment of T regulatory cells, high expression of anti-inflammatory cytokines, and matrisomal components were hallmarks of the tenascin-C-instructed lymphoid stroma. Ablation of tenascin-C or CCR7 blockade inhibited the lymphoid immune-suppressive stromal properties, reducing tumor growth, progression, and metastasis. Thus, targeting CCR7 could be relevant in human head and neck tumors, as high tenascin-C expression and an immune-suppressive stroma correlate to poor patient survival.
Keyphrases
- endothelial cells
- induced apoptosis
- lymph node
- poor prognosis
- cell cycle arrest
- extracellular matrix
- liver injury
- high glucose
- regulatory t cells
- squamous cell carcinoma
- bone marrow
- small cell lung cancer
- oxidative stress
- drug induced
- papillary thyroid
- cell death
- magnetic resonance imaging
- computed tomography
- endoplasmic reticulum stress
- early stage
- radiation therapy
- mass spectrometry
- vascular endothelial growth factor
- diabetic rats
- pi k akt
- nk cells