Department of Biomedical Sciences, Cornell University, Ithaca, New York.
Department of Microbiology and Immunology, Cornell University, Ithaca, New York.
Cancer Res. 2023 Jul 14;83(14):2328-2344. doi: 10.1158/0008-5472.CAN-22-2841.
Therapies targeting oncogene addiction have had a tremendous impact on tumor growth and patient outcome, but drug resistance continues to be problematic. One approach to deal with the challenge of resistance entails extending anticancer treatments beyond targeting cancer cells by additionally altering the tumor microenvironment. Understanding how the tumor microenvironment contributes to the evolution of diverse resistance pathways could aid in the design of sequential treatments that can elicit and take advantage of a predictable resistance trajectory. Tumor-associated macrophages often support neoplastic growth and are frequently the most abundant immune cell found in tumors. Here, we used clinically relevant in vivo Braf-mutant melanoma models with fluorescent markers to track the stage-specific changes in macrophages under targeted therapy with Braf/Mek inhibitors and assessed the dynamic evolution of the macrophage population generated by therapy pressure-induced stress. During the onset of a drug-tolerant persister state, Ccr2+ monocyte-derived macrophage infiltration rose, suggesting that macrophage influx at this point could facilitate the onset of stable drug resistance that melanoma cells show after several weeks of treatment. Comparison of melanomas that develop in a Ccr2-proficient or -deficient microenvironment demonstrated that lack of melanoma infiltrating Ccr2+ macrophages delayed onset of resistance and shifted melanoma cell evolution towards unstable resistance. Unstable resistance was characterized by sensitivity to targeted therapy when factors from the microenvironment were lost. Importantly, this phenotype was reversed by coculturing melanoma cells with Ccr2+ macrophages. Overall, this study demonstrates that the development of resistance may be directed by altering the tumor microenvironment to improve treatment timing and the probability of relapse.
Ccr2+ melanoma macrophages that are active in tumors during the drug-tolerant persister state following targeted therapy-induced regression are key contributors directing melanoma cell reprogramming toward specific therapeutic resistance trajectories.
靶向致癌基因成瘾的治疗方法对肿瘤生长和患者预后产生了巨大影响,但耐药性仍然是一个问题。应对耐药性挑战的一种方法是通过额外改变肿瘤微环境,将抗癌治疗从靶向癌细胞扩展到其他方面。了解肿瘤微环境如何促进不同耐药途径的演变,可以帮助设计连续治疗方案,从而引发并利用可预测的耐药轨迹。肿瘤相关巨噬细胞通常支持肿瘤生长,并且经常是肿瘤中最丰富的免疫细胞。在这里,我们使用具有荧光标记物的临床相关体内 Braf 突变黑色素瘤模型,来跟踪在 Braf/Mek 抑制剂靶向治疗下巨噬细胞的阶段特异性变化,并评估由治疗压力诱导的应激产生的巨噬细胞群体的动态演变。在耐受药物的持久状态开始时,Ccr2+单核细胞衍生的巨噬细胞浸润增加,这表明在这一点上,巨噬细胞的涌入可能有助于稳定耐药的出现,黑色素瘤细胞在治疗数周后会出现这种情况。比较在 Ccr2 功能正常或缺乏的微环境中发展的黑色素瘤表明,缺乏黑色素瘤浸润的 Ccr2+巨噬细胞会延迟耐药的发生,并促使黑色素瘤细胞向不稳定的耐药方向进化。不稳定的耐药性的特征是在失去微环境中的因素时,对靶向治疗敏感。重要的是,这种表型可以通过将黑色素瘤细胞与 Ccr2+巨噬细胞共培养来逆转。总的来说,这项研究表明,耐药的发展可能是通过改变肿瘤微环境来改善治疗时机和复发的可能性来指导的。
在靶向治疗诱导消退后的耐药性耐受持久状态下,在肿瘤中活跃的 Ccr2+黑色素瘤巨噬细胞是关键的贡献者,它们将黑色素瘤细胞重新编程为特定的治疗耐药轨迹。