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IL-33-mediated mast cell activation promotes gastric cancer through macrophage mobilization.

Moritz F EissmannChristine DijkstraAndrew JarnickiToby James PhesseJamina BrunnbergAshleigh R PohNima EtemadiEvelyn TsantikosStefan ThiemNicholas D HuntingtonMargaret L HibbsAlex BoussioutasMichele A GrimbaldestonMichael BuchertRobert J J O'DonoghueFrederick MassonMatthias Ernst
Published in: Nature communications (2019)
The contribution of mast cells in the microenvironment of solid malignancies remains controversial. Here we functionally assess the impact of tumor-adjacent, submucosal mast cell accumulation in murine and human intestinal-type gastric cancer. We find that genetic ablation or therapeutic inactivation of mast cells suppresses accumulation of tumor-associated macrophages, reduces tumor cell proliferation and angiogenesis, and diminishes tumor burden. Mast cells are activated by interleukin (IL)-33, an alarmin produced by the tumor epithelium in response to the inflammatory cytokine IL-11, which is required for the growth of gastric cancers in mice. Accordingly, ablation of the cognate IL-33 receptor St2 limits tumor growth, and reduces mast cell-dependent production and release of the macrophage-attracting factors Csf2, Ccl3, and Il6. Conversely, genetic or therapeutic macrophage depletion reduces tumor burden without affecting mast cell abundance. Therefore, tumor-derived IL-33 sustains a mast cell and macrophage-dependent signaling cascade that is amenable for the treatment of gastric cancer.
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