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Combinatorial Gli activity directs immune infiltration and tumor growth in pancreatic cancer.

Michael K ScalesAshley Velez-DelgadoNina G SteeleHannah E SchraderAnna M StabnickWei YanNayanna M Mercado SotoZeribe C NwosuCraig N JohnsonYaqing ZhangDaniel J Salas-EscabillasRosa E MenjivarH Carlo MaurerHoward C CrawfordFilip BednarKenneth P OliveMarina Pasca di MaglianoBenjamin L Allen
Published in: PLoS genetics (2022)
Proper Hedgehog (HH) signaling is essential for embryonic development, while aberrant HH signaling drives pediatric and adult cancers. HH signaling is frequently dysregulated in pancreatic cancer, yet its role remains controversial, with both tumor-promoting and tumor-restraining functions reported. Notably, the GLI family of HH transcription factors (GLI1, GLI2, GLI3), remain largely unexplored in pancreatic cancer. We therefore investigated the individual and combined contributions of GLI1-3 to pancreatic cancer progression. At pre-cancerous stages, fibroblast-specific Gli2/Gli3 deletion decreases immunosuppressive macrophage infiltration and promotes T cell infiltration. Strikingly, combined loss of Gli1/Gli2/Gli3 promotes macrophage infiltration, indicating that subtle changes in Gli expression differentially regulate immune infiltration. In invasive tumors, Gli2/Gli3 KO fibroblasts exclude immunosuppressive myeloid cells and suppress tumor growth by recruiting natural killer cells. Finally, we demonstrate that fibroblasts directly regulate macrophage and T cell migration through the expression of Gli-dependent cytokines. Thus, the coordinated activity of GLI1-3 directs the fibroinflammatory response throughout pancreatic cancer progression.
Keyphrases
  • induced apoptosis
  • oxidative stress
  • bone marrow
  • natural killer cells
  • immune response
  • dendritic cells
  • cell death
  • pi k akt