Chronic pulmonary bacterial infection facilitates breast cancer lung metastasis by recruiting tumor-promoting MHCII hi neutrophils.
Teng MaYu TangTaolin WangYang YangYige ZhangRuihuan WangYongxin ZhangYi LiMingbo WuMiao TangXueli HuChaoyu ZouYuan RenHuan LiuQianhua ZhangHeyue LiMingshan JiangJing LiXi-Kun ZhouPublished in: Signal transduction and targeted therapy (2023)
Breast cancer can metastasize to various organs, including the lungs. The immune microenvironment of the organs to be metastasized plays a crucial role in the metastasis of breast cancer. Infection with pathogens such as viruses and bacteria can alter the immune status of the lung. However, the effect of chronic inflammation caused by bacteria on the formation of a premetastatic niche within the lung is unclear, and the contribution of specific immune mediators to tumor metastasis also remains largely undetermined. Here, we used a mouse model revealing that chronic pulmonary bacterial infection augmented breast cancer lung metastasis by recruiting a distinct subtype of tumor-infiltrating MHCII hi neutrophils into the lung, which exhibit cancer-promoting properties. Functionally, MHCII hi neutrophils enhanced the lung metastasis of breast cancer in a cell-intrinsic manner. Furthermore, we identified CCL2 from lung tissues as an important environmental signal to recruit and maintain MHCII hi neutrophils. Our findings clearly link bacterial-immune crosstalk to breast cancer lung metastasis and define MHCII hi neutrophils as the principal mediator between chronic infection and tumor metastasis.