Anti‐inflammatory mechanisms in cancer research: Characterization of a distinct M2‐like macrophage model derived from the THP‐1 cell line

Author:

Scheurlen Katharina M.1ORCID,Snook Dylan L.1,Littlefield Andrew B.1,George Joan B.1,Parks Mary A.1,Beal Robert J.1,MacLeod Anne1,Riggs Daniel W.2,Gaskins Jeremy T.3,Chariker Julia4,Rouchka Eric C.4,Galandiuk Susan1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Digestive Surgery Research Laboratory, Price Institute of Surgical Research, The Hiram C. Polk, Jr, MD Department of Surgery University of Louisville School of Medicine Louisville Kentucky USA

2. Christina Lee Brown Envirome Institute, Division of Environmental Medicine, Department of Medicine University of Louisville Louisville Kentucky USA

3. Department of Bioinformatics & Biostatistics University of Louisville Louisville Kentucky USA

4. Kentucky IDeA Networks of Biomedical Research Excellence (KY INBRE), Bioinformatics Core University of Louisville Louisville Kentucky USA

Abstract

AbstractAimsMacrophages play an essential role in cancer development. Tumor‐associated macrophages (TAMs) have predominantly M2‐like attributes that are associated with tumor progression and poor patient survival. Numerous methods have been reported for differentiating and polarizing macrophages in vitro, but there is no standardized and validated model for creating TAMs. Primary cells show varying cytokine responses depending on their origin and functional studies utilizing these cells may lack generalization and validity. A distinct cell line‐derived TAM‐like M2 subtype is required to investigate the mechanisms mediated by anti‐inflammatory TAMs in vitro. Our previous work demonstrated a standardized protocol for creating an M2 subtype derived from a human THP‐1 cell line. The cell expression profile, however, has not been validated. The aim of this study was to characterize and validate the TAM‐like M2 subtype macrophage created based on our protocol to introduce them as a standardized model for cancer research.Methods and resultsUsing qRT‐PCR and ELISA, we demonstrated that proinflammatory, anti‐inflammatory, and tumor‐associated marker expression changed during THP‐1‐derived marcrophage development in vitro, mimicking a TAM‐related profile (e.g., TNFα, IL‐1β). The anti‐inflammatory marker IL‐8/CXCL8, however, is most highly expressed in young M0 macrophages. Flow cytometry showed increased expression of CD206 in the final TAM‐like M2 macrophage. Single‐cell RNA‐sequencing analysis of primary human monocytes and colon cancer tissue macrophages demonstrated that cell line‐derived M2 macrophages resembled a TAM‐related gene profile.ConclusionsThe THP‐1‐derived M2 macrophage based on a standardized cell line model represents a distinct anti‐inflammatory TAM‐like phenotype with an M2a subtype profile. This model may provide a basis for in vitro investigation of functional mechanisms in a variety of anti‐inflammatory settings, particularly colon cancer development.

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Cancer Research,Radiology, Nuclear Medicine and imaging,Oncology

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