This is a preprint.
Glioblastoma induces the recruitment and differentiation of hybrid neutrophils from skull bone marrow
- PMID: 36993266
- PMCID: PMC10055347
- DOI: 10.1101/2023.03.24.534105
Glioblastoma induces the recruitment and differentiation of hybrid neutrophils from skull bone marrow
Update in
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Glioblastoma induces the recruitment and differentiation of dendritic-like "hybrid" neutrophils from skull bone marrow.Cancer Cell. 2024 Sep 9;42(9):1549-1569.e16. doi: 10.1016/j.ccell.2024.08.008. Cancer Cell. 2024. PMID: 39255776 Free PMC article.
Abstract
Tumor-associated neutrophil (TAN) effects on glioblastoma biology remain under-characterized. We show here that 'hybrid' neutrophils with dendritic features - including morphological complexity, expression of antigen presentation genes, and the ability to process exogenous peptide and stimulate MHCII-dependent T cell activation - accumulate intratumorally and suppress tumor growth in vivo . Trajectory analysis of patient TAN scRNA-seq identifies this phenotype as a polarization state which is distinct from canonical cytotoxic TANs and differentiates intratumorally from immature precursors absent in circulation. Rather, these hybrid-inducible immature neutrophils - which we identified in patient and murine glioblastomas - arise from local skull marrow. Through labeled skull flap transplantation and targeted ablation, we characterize calvarial marrow as a potent contributor of antitumoral myeloid APCs, including hybrid TANs and dendritic cells, which elicit T cell cytotoxicity and memory. As such, agents augmenting neutrophil egress from skull marrow - such as intracalvarial AMD3100 whose survival prolonging-effect in GBM we demonstrate - present therapeutic potential.
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