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Heme catabolism by tumor-associated macrophages controls metastasis formation.

Francesca Maria ConsonniAugusto BleveMaria Grazia TotaroMariangela StortoPaolo KunderfrancoAlberto TermaniniFabio PasqualiniChiara AlìChiara PandolfoFrancesco SgambelluriGiulia GraziaMario SantinamiAndrea MaurichiMassimo MilioneMarco ErreniAndrea DoniMarco FabbriLaura GribaldoEliana RulliMiguel Parreira SoaresValter TorriRoberta MortariniAlessandro DesideriAntonio Sica
Published in: Nature immunology (2021)
Although the pathological significance of tumor-associated macrophage (TAM) heterogeneity is still poorly understood, TAM reprogramming is viewed as a promising anticancer therapy. Here we show that a distinct subset of TAMs (F4/80hiCD115hiC3aRhiCD88hi), endowed with high rates of heme catabolism by the stress-responsive enzyme heme oxygenase-1 (HO-1), plays a critical role in shaping a prometastatic tumor microenvironment favoring immunosuppression, angiogenesis and epithelial-to-mesenchymal transition. This population originates from F4/80+HO-1+ bone marrow (BM) precursors, accumulates in the blood of tumor bearers and preferentially localizes at the invasive margin through a mechanism dependent on the activation of Nrf2 and coordinated by the NF-κB1-CSF1R-C3aR axis. Inhibition of F4/80+HO-1+ TAM recruitment or myeloid-specific deletion of HO-1 blocks metastasis formation and improves anticancer immunotherapy. Relative expression of HO-1 in peripheral monocyte subsets, as well as in tumor lesions, discriminates survival among metastatic melanoma patients. Overall, these results identify a distinct cancer-induced HO-1+ myeloid subgroup as a new antimetastatic target and prognostic blood marker.
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