| Literature DB >> 35121943 |
Mirco Friedrich1,2,3, Roman Sankowski4, Lukas Bunse1,2,3, Marco Prinz4,5,6, Michael Platten7,8,9, Michael Kilian1,3,10, Edward Green1,3, Carina Ramallo Guevara11, Stefan Pusch12,13, Gernot Poschet14, Khwab Sanghvi1,3,10, Markus Hahn1,3, Theresa Bunse1,3, Philipp Münch1,15, Hagen M Gegner14, Jana K Sonner1,10, Anna von Landenberg1, Frederik Cichon1,10, Katrin Aslan1,10, Tim Trobisch3, Lucas Schirmer3, Denis Abu-Sammour11, Tobias Kessler2,16, Miriam Ratliff17, Daniel Schrimpf12,13, Felix Sahm12,13, Carsten Hopf11, Dieter H Heiland18, Oliver Schnell18, Jürgen Beck18, Chotima Böttcher19, Camila Fernandez-Zapata19, Josef Priller19,20,21,22, Sabine Heiland15, Ilona Gutcher23, Francisco J Quintana24, Andreas von Deimling12,13, Wolfgang Wick2,16.
Abstract
The dynamics and phenotypes of intratumoral myeloid cells during tumor progression are poorly understood. Here we define myeloid cellular states in gliomas by longitudinal single-cell profiling and demonstrate their strict control by the tumor genotype: in isocitrate dehydrogenase (IDH)-mutant tumors, differentiation of infiltrating myeloid cells is blocked, resulting in an immature phenotype. In late-stage gliomas, monocyte-derived macrophages drive tolerogenic alignment of the microenvironment, thus preventing T cell response. We define the IDH-dependent tumor education of infiltrating macrophages to be causally related to a complex re-orchestration of tryptophan metabolism, resulting in activation of the aryl hydrocarbon receptor. We further show that the altered metabolism of IDH-mutant gliomas maintains this axis in bystander cells and that pharmacological inhibition of tryptophan metabolism can reverse immunosuppression. In conclusion, we provide evidence of a glioma genotype-dependent intratumoral network of resident and recruited myeloid cells and identify tryptophan metabolism as a target for immunotherapy of IDH-mutant tumors.Entities:
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Year: 2021 PMID: 35121943 DOI: 10.1038/s43018-021-00201-z
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Nat Cancer ISSN: 2662-1347