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Inhibition of RANK signaling in breast cancer induces an anti-tumor immune response orchestrated by CD8+ T cells

Most breast cancers exhibit low immune infiltration and are unresponsive to immunotherapy. We hypothesized that inhibition of the receptor activator of nuclear factor-κB (RANK) signaling pathway may enhance immune activation. Here we report that loss of RANK signaling in mouse tumor cells increases...

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Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Gómez-Aleza, Clara, Nguyen, Bastien, Yoldi, Guillermo, Ciscar, Marina, Barranco, Alexandra, Hernández-Jiménez, Enrique, Maetens, Marion, Salgado, Roberto, Zafeiroglou, Maria, Pellegrini, Pasquale, Venet, David, Garaud, Soizic, Trinidad, Eva M., Benítez, Sandra, Vuylsteke, Peter, Polastro, Laura, Wildiers, Hans, Simon, Philippe, Lindeman, Geoffrey, Larsimont, Denis, Van den Eynden, Gert, Velghe, Chloé, Rothé, Françoise, Willard-Gallo, Karen, Michiels, Stefan, Muñoz, Purificación, Walzer, Thierry, Planelles, Lourdes, Penninger, Josef, Azim, Hatem A., Loi, Sherene, Piccart, Martine, Sotiriou, Christos, González-Suárez, Eva
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Nature Publishing Group UK 2020
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7728758/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/33303745
http://dx.doi.org/10.1038/s41467-020-20138-8
Descripción
Sumario:Most breast cancers exhibit low immune infiltration and are unresponsive to immunotherapy. We hypothesized that inhibition of the receptor activator of nuclear factor-κB (RANK) signaling pathway may enhance immune activation. Here we report that loss of RANK signaling in mouse tumor cells increases leukocytes, lymphocytes, and CD8(+) T cells, and reduces macrophage and neutrophil infiltration. CD8(+) T cells mediate the attenuated tumor phenotype observed upon RANK loss, whereas neutrophils, supported by RANK-expressing tumor cells, induce immunosuppression. RANKL inhibition increases the anti-tumor effect of immunotherapies in breast cancer through a tumor cell mediated effect. Comparably, pre-operative single-agent denosumab in premenopausal early-stage breast cancer patients from the Phase-II D-BEYOND clinical trial (NCT01864798) is well tolerated, inhibits RANK pathway and increases tumor infiltrating lymphocytes and CD8(+) T cells. Higher RANK signaling activation in tumors and serum RANKL levels at baseline predict these immune-modulatory effects. No changes in tumor cell proliferation (primary endpoint) or other secondary endpoints are observed. Overall, our preclinical and clinical findings reveal that tumor cells exploit RANK pathway as a mechanism to evade immune surveillance and support the use of RANK pathway inhibitors to prime luminal breast cancer for immunotherapy.