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CD300ld on neutrophils is required for tumour-driven immune suppression.

Chaoxiong WangXichen ZhengJinlan ZhangXiaoyi JiangJia WangYuwei LiXiaonan LiGuanghui ShenJiayin PengPeixuan ZhengYunqing GuJiaojiao ChenMoubin LinChangwen DengHai GaoZhigang LuYun ZhaoMin Luo
Published in: Nature (2023)
The immune-suppressive tumour microenvironment represents a major obstacle to effective immunotherapy 1,2 . Pathologically activated neutrophils, also known as polymorphonuclear myeloid-derived suppressor cells (PMN-MDSCs), are a critical component of the tumour microenvironment and have crucial roles in tumour progression and therapy resistance 2-4 . Identification of the key molecules on PMN-MDSCs is required to selectively target these cells for tumour treatment. Here, we performed an in vivo CRISPR-Cas9 screen in a tumour mouse model and identified CD300ld as a top candidate of tumour-favouring receptors. CD300ld is specifically expressed in normal neutrophils and is upregulated in PMN-MDSCs upon tumour-bearing. CD300ld knockout inhibits the development of multiple tumour types in a PMN-MDSC-dependent manner. CD300ld is required for the recruitment of PMN-MDSCs into tumours and their function to suppress T cell activation. CD300ld acts via the STAT3-S100A8/A9 axis, and knockout of Cd300ld reverses the tumour immune-suppressive microenvironment. CD300ld is upregulated in human cancers and shows an unfavourable correlation with patient survival. Blocking CD300ld activity inhibits tumour development and has synergistic effects with anti-PD1. Our study identifies CD300ld as a critical immune suppressor present on PMN-MDSCs, being required for tumour immune resistance and providing a potential target for cancer immunotherapy.
Keyphrases
  • crispr cas
  • nk cells
  • mouse model
  • gene expression
  • young adults
  • drug delivery
  • genome editing
  • oxidative stress
  • high throughput
  • risk assessment
  • genome wide
  • case report
  • free survival
  • human health