| Literature DB >> 34183415 |
Laura Ducimetière1, Giulia Lucchiari2, Gioana Litscher1, Marc Nater2, Laura Heeb1, Nicolás Gonzalo Nuñez3, Laura Wyss2, Dominik Burri2, Marijne Vermeer1, Julia Gschwend1, Andreas E Moor4, Burkhard Becher3, Maries van den Broek5, Sonia Tugues6.
Abstract
The liver is a major metastatic target organ, and little is known about the role of immunity in controlling hepatic metastases. Here, we discovered that the concerted and nonredundant action of two innate lymphocyte subpopulations, conventional natural killer cells (cNKs) and tissue-resident type I innate lymphoid cells (trILC1s), is essential for antimetastatic defense. Using different preclinical models for liver metastasis, we found that trILC1 controls metastatic seeding, whereas cNKs restrain outgrowth. Whereas the killing capacity of trILC1s was not affected by the metastatic microenvironment, the phenotype and function of cNK cells were affected in a cancer type-specific fashion. Thus, individual cancer cell lines orchestrate the emergence of unique cNK subsets, which respond differently to tumor-derived factors. Our findings will contribute to the development of therapies for liver metastasis involving hepatic innate cells.Entities:
Keywords: conventional NK cells; innate lymphocytes; metastatic surveillance; tissue-resident ILC1s
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Year: 2021 PMID: 34183415 PMCID: PMC8271692 DOI: 10.1073/pnas.2026271118
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A ISSN: 0027-8424 Impact factor: 11.205