Reprogramming tumor-associated macrophages to outcompete endovascular endothelial progenitor cells and suppress tumor neoangiogenesis.
Academic Article
Overview
abstract
Tumors develop by invoking a supportive environment characterized by aberrant angiogenesis and infiltration of tumor-associated macrophages (TAMs). In a transgenic model of breast cancer, we found that TAMs localized to the tumor parenchyma and were smaller than mammary tissue macrophages. TAMs had low activity of the metabolic regulator mammalian/mechanistic target of rapamycin complex 1 (mTORC1), and depletion of negative regulator of mTORC1 signaling, tuberous sclerosis complex 1 (TSC1), in TAMs inhibited tumor growth in a manner independent of adaptive lymphocytes. Whereas wild-type TAMs exhibited inflammatory and angiogenic gene expression profiles, TSC1-deficient TAMs had a pro-resolving phenotype. TSC1-deficient TAMs relocated to a perivascular niche, depleted protein C receptor (PROCR)-expressing endovascular endothelial progenitor cells, and rectified the hyperpermeable blood vasculature, causing tumor tissue hypoxia and cancer cell death. TSC1-deficient TAMs were metabolically active and effectively eliminated PROCR-expressing endothelial cells in cell competition experiments. Thus, TAMs exhibit a TSC1-dependent mTORC1-low state, and increasing mTORC1 signaling promotes a pro-resolving state that suppresses tumor growth, defining an innate immune tumor suppression pathway that may be exploited for cancer immunotherapy.