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M2 macrophages drive leukemic transformation by imposing resistance to phagocytosis and improving mitochondrial metabolism.

Isabel WeinhäuserDiego Antonio Pereira-MartinsLuciana Yamamoto de AlmeidaJacobien R HilberinkDouglas Rafaele Almeida SilveiraLynn QuekCésar Alexander OrtizCleide Lúcia Araújo SilvaThiago M BiancoAntônio Roberto Lucena de AraujoJose Mauricio MotaShanna M HogelingDominique SternadtNienke VisserArjan DiepstraEmanuele AmmatunaGerwin HulsEduardo Magalhães RegoJan Jacob Schuringa
Published in: Science advances (2023)
It is increasingly becoming clear that cancers are a symbiosis of diverse cell types and tumor clones. Combined single-cell RNA sequencing, flow cytometry, and immunohistochemistry studies of the innate immune compartment in the bone marrow of patients with acute myeloid leukemia (AML) reveal a shift toward a tumor-supportive M2-polarized macrophage landscape with an altered transcriptional program, with enhanced fatty acid oxidation and NAD + generation. Functionally, these AML-associated macrophages display decreased phagocytic activity and intra-bone marrow coinjection of M2 macrophages together with leukemic blasts strongly enhances in vivo transformation potential. A 2-day in vitro exposure to M2 macrophages results in the accumulation of CALR low leukemic blast cells, which are now protected against phagocytosis. Moreover, M2-exposed "trained" leukemic blasts display increased mitochondrial metabolism, in part mediated via mitochondrial transfer. Our study provides insight into the mechanisms by which the immune landscape contributes to aggressive leukemia development and provides alternatives for targeting strategies aimed at the tumor microenvironment.
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