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Macrophage-targeted therapy unlocks antitumoral crosstalk between IFN𝛾-secreting lymphocytes and IL12-producing dendritic cells.

Christina PfirschkeRapolas ZilionisCamilla EngblomMarius MessemakerAngela E ZouSteffen RickeltNicolas A Gort-FreitasYunkang LinRuben BillMarie SiwickiJeremy GungabeesoonMelissa M SprachmanAngela N MarquardChristopher Blake RodellMichael F CuccareseJeremy QuintanaMaaz S AhmedRainer H KohlerVirginia SavovaRalph WeisslederAllon M KleinMikael J Pittet
Published in: Cancer immunology research (2021)
Macrophages often abound within tumors, express colony-stimulating factor 1 receptor (CSF1R), and are linked to adverse patient survival. Drugs blocking CSF1R signaling have been used to suppress tumor-promoting macrophage responses; however, their mechanisms of action remain incompletely understood. Here, we assessed the lung tumor immune microenvironment in mice treated with BLZ945, a prototypical small molecule CSF1R inhibitor, using single-cell RNA sequencing and mechanistic validation approaches. We showed that tumor control was not caused by CSF1R+ cell depletion; instead, CSF1R targeting reshaped the CSF1R+ cell landscape, which unlocked crosstalk between antitumoral CSF1R- cells. These cells included IFNγ-producing NK and T cells, and an IL12-producing dendritic cell subset, denoted as DC3, which were all necessary for CSF1R inhibitor-mediated lung tumor control. These data indicate that CSF1R targeting can activate a cardinal crosstalk between cells that are not macrophages and that are essential to mediate the effects of T cell-targeted immunotherapies and promote antitumor immunity.
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