IFN-III is selectively produced by cDC1 and predicts good clinical outcome in breast cancer.
Margaux HubertElisa GobbiniColine Agnes CouillaultThien-Phong Vu ManhAnne-Claire DoffinJustine BerthetCéline RodriguezVincent OllionJanice KielbassaChristophe SajousIsabelle TreilleuxOlivier TrédanBertrand DuboisMarc DalodNathalie Bendriss-VermareChristophe CauxJenny Valladeau-GuilemondPublished in: Science immunology (2020)
Dendritic cells play a key role in the orchestration of antitumor immune responses. The cDC1 (conventional dendritic cell 1) subset has been shown to be essential for antitumor responses and response to immunotherapy, but its precise role in humans is largely unexplored. Using a multidisciplinary approach, we demonstrate that human cDC1 play an important role in the antitumor immune response through their capacity to produce type III interferon (IFN-λ). By analyzing a large cohort of breast primary tumors and public transcriptomic datasets, we observed specific production of IFN-λ1 by cDC1. In addition, both IFN-λ1 and its receptor were associated with favorable patient outcomes. We show that IFN-III promotes a TH1 microenvironment through increased production of IL-12p70, IFN-γ, and cytotoxic lymphocyte-recruiting chemokines. Last, we showed that engagement of TLR3 is a therapeutic strategy to induce IFN-III production by tumor-associated cDC1. These data provide insight into potential IFN- or cDC1-targeting antitumor therapies.