Frontiers in Immunology (Jun 2021)

Infiltration by CXCL10 Secreting Macrophages Is Associated With Antitumor Immunity and Response to Therapy in Ovarian Cancer Subtypes

  • Laura Ardighieri,
  • Francesco Missale,
  • Francesco Missale,
  • Mattia Bugatti,
  • Mattia Bugatti,
  • Luisa Benerini Gatta,
  • Irene Pezzali,
  • Matilde Monti,
  • Stefano Gottardi,
  • Laura Zanotti,
  • Laura Zanotti,
  • Eliana Bignotti,
  • Eliana Bignotti,
  • Antonella Ravaggi,
  • Antonella Ravaggi,
  • Antonella Ravaggi,
  • Germana Tognon,
  • Franco Odicino,
  • Franco Odicino,
  • Stefano Calza,
  • Stefano Calza,
  • Stefano Calza,
  • Yoann Missolo-Koussou,
  • Carola Hermine Ries,
  • Julie Helft,
  • William Vermi,
  • William Vermi,
  • William Vermi

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3389/fimmu.2021.690201
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 12

Abstract

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Ovarian carcinomas (OCs) are poorly immunogenic and immune checkpoint inhibitors (ICIs) have offered a modest benefit. In this study, high CD3+ T-cells and CD163+ tumor-associated macrophages (TAMs) densities identify a subgroup of immune infiltrated high-grade serous carcinomas (HGSCs) with better outcomes and superior response to platinum-based therapies. On the contrary, in most clear cell carcinomas (CCCs) showing poor prognosis and refractory to platinum, a high TAM density is associated with low T cell frequency. Immune infiltrated HGSC are characterized by the 30-genes signature (OC-IS30) covering immune activation and IFNγ polarization and predicting good prognosis (n = 312, TCGA). Immune infiltrated HGSC contain CXCL10 producing M1-type TAM (IRF1+pSTAT1Y701+) in close proximity to T-cells. A fraction of these M1-type TAM also co-expresses TREM2. M1-polarized TAM were barely detectable in T-cell poor CCC, but identifiable across various immunogenic human cancers. Single cell RNA sequencing data confirm the existence of a tumor-infiltrating CXCL10+IRF1+STAT1+ M1-type TAM overexpressing antigen processing and presentation gene programs. Overall, this study highlights the clinical relevance of the CXCL10+IRF1+STAT1+ macrophage subset as biomarker for intratumoral T-cell activation and therefore offers a new tool to select patients more likely to respond to T-cell or macrophage-targeted immunotherapies.

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