Macrophage reprogramming—rather than depletion—is efficacious in a specific subset of colorectal tumor models

Author:

Mohamed Noha-Ehssan1,Amirkhah Raheleh2ORCID,Lavaud Xabier-Cortes3,Gilroy Kathryn4ORCID,Bartolini Robin5,Mulholland Eoghan J.6,Garg Abhishek D.7ORCID,Pennel Kathryn8,Jackstadt Rene4,Ridgway Rachel A.9ORCID,Nixon Colin4,Hatthakarnku Phimmada8,Campbell Andrew D.4ORCID,Leedham Simon J.10,Edwards Joanne8,Dunne Philip D.2ORCID,Barry Simon T.11ORCID,Graham Gerard J.12,Sansom Owen J.9ORCID

Affiliation:

1. School of Cancer Sciences, University of Glasgow, UK

2. Queen's University Belfast

3. CRUK Beastson Institute

4. CRUK Beatson Institute

5. School of infection and immunity, University of Glasgow

6. Wellcome Trust Centre Human Genetics, University of Oxford

7. KU Leuven

8. School of Cancer Sciences, University of Glasgow

9. Cancer Research UK Beatson Institute

10. University of Oxford

11. AstraZeneca

12. Institute of Infection

Abstract

Abstract Despite the abundance of macrophages in colorectal cancer (CRC), macrophage-targeted therapy has not demonstrated significant clinical benefit. Here, we show that macrophage populations differ across the consensus molecular subtypes (CMS) of CRC and report the first preclinical study of macrophage targeting using mouse models stratified by CMS class. Whereas pan-macrophage ablation, using a CSF1R-inhibitor, lacked efficacy across CMS classes, genetic deletion of inflammatory chemokine receptors (iCCRs) reprogrammed macrophages towards an anti-tumorigenic phenotype, curtailing tumorigenesis in models of CMS1 CRC. We identify an iCCR-independent anti-tumorigenic antigen-presenting macrophage population necessary for therapeutic efficacy. We further show that individual targeting of the CCR1, CCR2, and CCR5 receptors on CRC macrophages lacks benefit, whereas their combined targeting holds promise. We propose that selective targeting of immunosuppressive macrophage populations, whilst sparing antigen-presenting subsets, should be considered when trialling macrophage-targeted therapies.

Publisher

Research Square Platform LLC

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