Cellular and Molecular Gastroenterology and Hepatology (Jan 2019)

The CCR2+ Macrophage Subset Promotes Pathogenic Angiogenesis for Tumor Vascularization in Fibrotic LiversSummary

  • Matthias Bartneck,
  • Peter L. Schrammen,
  • Diana Möckel,
  • Olivier Govaere,
  • Anke Liepelt,
  • Oliver Krenkel,
  • Can Ergen,
  • Misti Vanette McCain,
  • Dirk Eulberg,
  • Tom Luedde,
  • Christian Trautwein,
  • Fabian Kiessling,
  • Helen Reeves,
  • Twan Lammers,
  • Frank Tacke

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 7, no. 2
pp. 371 – 390

Abstract

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Background & Aims: Hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) typically arises in fibrotic or cirrhotic livers, which are characterized by pathogenic angiogenesis. Myeloid immune cells, specifically tumor-associated macrophages (TAMs), may represent potential novel therapeutic targets in HCC, complementing current ablative or immune therapies. However, the detailed functions of TAM subsets in hepatocarcinogenesis have remained obscure. Methods: TAM subsets were analyzed in-depth in human HCC samples and a combined fibrosis–HCC mouse model, established by i.p. injection with diethylnitrosamine after birth and repetitive carbon tetrachloride (CCl4) treatment for 16 weeks. Based on comprehensively phenotyping TAM subsets (fluorescence-activated cell sorter, transcriptomics) in mice, the function of CCR2+ TAM was assessed by a pharmacologic chemokine inhibitor. Angiogenesis was evaluated by contrast-enhanced micro–computed tomography and histology. Results: We show that human CCR2+ TAM accumulate at the highly vascularized HCC border and express the inflammatory marker S100A9, whereas CD163+ immune-suppressive TAM accrue in the HCC center. In the fibrosis–cancer mouse model, we identified 3 major hepatic myeloid cell populations with distinct messenger RNA profiles, of which CCR2+ TAM particularly showed activated inflammatory and angiogenic pathways. Inhibiting CCR2+ TAM infiltration using a pharmacologic chemokine CCL2 antagonist in the fibrosis–HCC model significantly reduced pathogenic vascularization and hepatic blood volume, alongside attenuated tumor volume. Conclusions: The HCC microenvironment in human patients and mice is characterized by functionally distinct macrophage populations, of which the CCR2+ inflammatory TAM subset has pro-angiogenic properties. Understanding the functional differentiation of myeloid cell subsets in chronically inflamed liver may provide novel opportunities for modulating hepatic macrophages to inhibit tumor-promoting pathogenic angiogenesis. Keywords: Tumor-Associated Macrophages, Fibrosis, HCC, Chemokine, Therapy, Angiogenesis