Abstract 84P
Background
Macrophages represent the main infiltrating immune subset in most cancer types and tumor-associated macrophages (TAMs) sustain tumor growth, promote invasion and mediate immune suppression. Interestingly, a population of lipid-loaded macrophages has been recently identified in prostate cancer, colon cancer and melanoma. However, the mechanisms that drive lipid accumulation in macrophages and the functional impact of lipid-loading still need to be uncovered.
Methods
We profiled the cancer immune infiltrate in a murine model of melanoma and we performed bulk RNA sequencing of lipid-loaded macrophages to investigate pathways involved in lipid accumulation. We applied in vitro assays to dissect the interplay between macrophages and melanoma cells and we took advantage of immunofluorescence analysis to study the mechanisms responsible for lipid accumulation in tumor-conditioned macrophages.
Results
We confirmed that lipid accumulation is a feature of TAMs in melanoma and we observed that lipid-loaded macrophages express markers of immunosuppression, including arginase and PD-L1. Importantly, the abundance of lipid-loaded macrophages correlates with tumor size, suggesting their support to tumor progression. In vitro, cancer cells shift the polarization of macrophages toward a pro-tumoral state and augment their capability to accumulate lipid droplets when triggered with lipid species. In addition, autophagic flux resulted impaired in macrophages exposed to tumor cells, suggesting defective autophagy as a potential mechanism responsible for lipid accumulation. In the end, we observed that transcription factor EB (TFEB) is deregulated in tumor-conditioned macrophages, indicating a role of TFEB in promoting autophagy deficiency and lipid accumulation in TAMs.
Conclusions
Here we show that TAMs in melanoma accumulate lipids and acquire pro-tumorigenic and immunosuppressive features. Additionally, the inactivation of transcription factor EB promotes a defective autophagic machinery that could be relevant in lipid accumulation in TAMs. In this context, we believe that TFEB activation may prevent lipid accumulation thus potentially improving efficacy of current available immunotherapies and therefore representing a promising opportunity for cancer therapy.
Editorial acknowledgement
Clinical trial identification
Legal entity responsible for the study
The authors.
Funding
Fondazione AIRC per la Ricerca sul Cancro.
Disclosure
All authors have declared no conflicts of interest.
Resources from the same session
10P - An adapted CGP-based model to interpret POLE mutations in endometrial cancer
Presenter: Rita Trozzi
Session: Cocktail & Poster Display session
Resources:
Abstract
11P - Reconstructing tumour evolution of single cells using both somatic mutations and copy-number alterations
Presenter: Rija Zaidi
Session: Cocktail & Poster Display session
Resources:
Abstract
12P - Swiss-PO: Molecular modelling for precision oncology
Presenter: Fanny Krebs
Session: Cocktail & Poster Display session
Resources:
Abstract
13P - A novel algorithm for predicting variant detectability in oncogenomic analysis
Presenter: Alper Akkuş
Session: Cocktail & Poster Display session
Resources:
Abstract
14P - expHRD: An algorithm for the transcriptome-based estimation of homologous recombination deficiency score
Presenter: Jin-Ku Lee
Session: Cocktail & Poster Display session
Resources:
Abstract
15P - ClinBioNGS: An integrated clinical bioinformatics pipeline for the analysis of somatic NGS cancer panels
Presenter: Xavier Sole
Session: Cocktail & Poster Display session
Resources:
Abstract
16P - Investigation of c-MYC role in DNA-PK-mediated activation of STING pathway in SCLC
Presenter: Caterina de Rosa
Session: Cocktail & Poster Display session
Resources:
Abstract
17P - NRF2 activation promotes HER2-targeted tolerance and resistance in oesophageal adenocarcinoma through metabolic reprogramming to glutathione
Presenter: Wei Zhang
Session: Cocktail & Poster Display session
Resources:
Abstract
18P - AURKB inhibition radiosensitises NSCLC by altering mitotic fate
Presenter: Kathryn Egerton
Session: Cocktail & Poster Display session
Resources:
Abstract
19P - Stratified control study on neuroendocrine differentiation and potential clinical markers in patients with limited-stage small-cell lung cancer
Presenter: Li Liu
Session: Cocktail & Poster Display session
Resources:
Abstract