[HTML][HTML] Breast cancer cell debris diminishes therapeutic efficacy through heme oxygenase-1-mediated inactivation of M1-like tumor-associated macrophages

SH Kim, S Saeidi, X Zhong, SY Gwak, IA Muna… - Neoplasia, 2020 - Elsevier
SH Kim, S Saeidi, X Zhong, SY Gwak, IA Muna, SA Park, SH Kim, HK Na, Y Joe, HT Chung…
Neoplasia, 2020Elsevier
Chemotherapy is commonly used as a major therapeutic option for breast cancer treatment,
but its efficacy is often diminished by disruption of patient's anti-tumor immunity.
Chemotherapy-generated tumor cell debris could hijack accumulated tumor-associated
macrophages (TAMs), provoking tumor recurrence. Therefore, reprogramming TAMs to
acquire an immunocompetent phenotype is a promising strategy to potentiate therapeutic
efficacy. In this study, we analyzed the proportion of immune cells in the breast cancer …
Abstract
Chemotherapy is commonly used as a major therapeutic option for breast cancer treatment, but its efficacy is often diminished by disruption of patient’s anti-tumor immunity. Chemotherapy-generated tumor cell debris could hijack accumulated tumor-associated macrophages (TAMs), provoking tumor recurrence. Therefore, reprogramming TAMs to acquire an immunocompetent phenotype is a promising strategy to potentiate therapeutic efficacy. In this study, we analyzed the proportion of immune cells in the breast cancer patients who received chemotherapy. To validate our findings in vivo, we used a syngeneic murine breast cancer (4T1) model. Chemotherapy generates an immunosuppressive tumor microenvironment in breast cancer. Here, we show that phagocytic engulfment of tumor cell debris by TAMs reduces chemotherapeutic efficacy in a 4T1 breast cancer model. Specifically, the engulfment of tumor cell debris by macrophages reduced M1-like polarization through heme oxygenase-1 (HO-1) upregulation. Conversely, genetic or pharmacologic inhibition of HO-1 in TAMs restored the M1-like polarization. Our results demonstrate that tumor cell debris-induced HO-1 expression in macrophages regulates their polarization. Inhibition of HO-1 overexpression in TAMs may provoke a robust anti-tumor immune response, thereby potentiating the efficacy of chemotherapy.
Elsevier