BAFF attenuates immunosuppressive monocytes in the melanoma tumor microenvironment.
Wei LiuPawel StachuraHaifeng C XuRenata VaraljaiPrashant ShindeNikkitha Umesh GaneshMatthias MackAnke van LieropAnfei HuangBalamurugan SundaramKarl S LangDaniel PicardUte FischerMarc RemkeBernhard HomeyAlexander RoeschDieter HäussingerPhilipp A LangArndt BorkhardtAleksandra A PandyraPublished in: Cancer research (2021)
Emerging evidence indicates B cell activating factor (BAFF, Tnfsf13b) to be an important cytokine for anti-tumor immunity. In this study, we generated a BAFF-overexpressing B16.F10 melanoma cell model and found that BAFF-expressing tumors grow more slowly in vivo than control tumors. The tumor microenvironment (TME) of BAFF-overexpressing tumors had decreased myeloid infiltrates with lower PD-L1 expression. Monocyte depletion and anti-PD-L1 antibody treatment confirmed the functional importance of monocytes for the phenotype of BAFF-mediated tumor growth delay. RNA-Seq analysis confirmed that monocytes isolated from BAFF-overexpressing tumors were characterized by a less exhaustive phenotype and were enriched for in genes involved in activating adaptive immune responses and NF-κB signaling. Evaluation of late stage metastatic melanoma patients treated with inhibitors of the PD-1/PD-L1 axis demonstrated a stratification of patients with high and low BAFF plasma levels. Patients with high BAFF levels experienced lower responses to anti-PD-1 immunotherapies. In summary, these results show that BAFF, through its effect on tumor infiltrating monocytes, not only impacts primary tumor growth but can serve as a biomarker to predict response to anti-PD-1 immunotherapy in advanced disease.