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Inducible CCR2+ nonclassical monocytes mediate the regression of cancer metastasis
Xianpeng Liu, … , G.R. Scott Budinger, Ankit Bharat
Xianpeng Liu, … , G.R. Scott Budinger, Ankit Bharat
Published November 15, 2024
Citation Information: J Clin Invest. 2024;134(22):e179527. https://doi.org/10.1172/JCI179527.
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Research Article Immunology

Inducible CCR2+ nonclassical monocytes mediate the regression of cancer metastasis

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Abstract

A major limitation of immunotherapy is the development of resistance resulting from cancer-mediated inhibition of host lymphocytes. Cancer cells release CCL2 to recruit classical monocytes expressing its receptor CCR2 for the promotion of metastasis and resistance to immunosurveillance. In the circulation, some CCR2-expressing classical monocytes lose CCR2 and differentiate into intravascular nonclassical monocytes that have anticancer properties but are unable to access extravascular tumor sites. We found that in mice and humans, an ontogenetically distinct subset of naturally underrepresented CCR2-expressing nonclassical monocytes was expanded during inflammatory states such as organ transplant and COVID-19 infection. These cells could be induced during health by treatment of classical monocytes with small-molecule activators of NOD2. The presence of CCR2 enabled these inducible nonclassical monocytes to infiltrate both intra- and extravascular metastatic sites of melanoma, lung, breast, and colon cancer in murine models, and they reversed the increased susceptibility of Nod2–/– mutant mice to cancer metastasis. Within the tumor colonies, CCR2+ nonclassical monocytes secreted CCL6 to recruit NK cells that mediated tumor regression, independent of T and B lymphocytes. Hence, pharmacological induction of CCR2+ nonclassical monocytes might be useful for immunotherapy-resistant cancers.

Authors

Xianpeng Liu, Ziyou Ren, Can Tan, Félix L. Núñez-Santana, Megan E. Kelly, Yuanqing Yan, Haiying Sun, Hiam Abdala-Valencia, Wenbin Yang, Qiang Wu, Takahide Toyoda, Marija Milisav, S. Marina Casalino-Matsuda, Emilia Lecuona, Emily Jeong Cerier, Lena J. Heung, Mohamed E. Abazeed, Harris Perlman, Ruli Gao, Navdeep S. Chandel, G.R. Scott Budinger, Ankit Bharat

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Figure 7

Regression of metastasis by I-NCMs is independent of T and B lymphocytes.

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Regression of metastasis by I-NCMs is independent of T and B lymphocytes...
(A and B) MDP treatment reduced the established B16F10 clusters in the lung in T cell–deficient Rag1–/– mice but not in T cell–deficient and NK-impaired NOD/SCID mice. (C and D) MDP treatment suppressed the established B16F10 clusters in Nr4a1–/– lungs (C) in the absence of CD4+ and CD8+ T cells (D). Data are presented as mean ± SEM; n = 3–10 in each group; **P < 0.01, ***P < 0.001; 2-tailed t test in A and B (for 2-column comparison), 1-way ANOVA in B (for multiple-column comparison) and C and D.

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