Abstract
Immune checkpoint therapy has limited efficacy for patients with bone-metastatic castration-resistant prostate cancer (bmCRPC). To improve immunotherapy for bmCRPC, we aimed to identify the mechanism of bmCRPC-induced changes in the immune microenvironment. Among bmCRPC patients, higher levels of a 32-gene M2-like macrophage signature in bone metastasis samples correlated with shorter overall survival. Immunohistochemistry showed that CD206-positive (CD206+) macrophages were enriched in bmCRPC bone biopsy specimens compared with primary tumors or lymph node metastases. In preclinical osteogenic prostate cancer (Pca) xenograft models, CD206+ macrophages were recruited to areas with tumor-induced bone. RNA sequencing (RNAseq) analysis showed higher expression of an M2-like gene signature, with activated canonical and noncanonical Wnt pathways, in tumor-associated macrophages isolated from osteogenic tumors (bone-TAMs) than in TAMs isolated from nonosteogenic tumors (ctrl-TAMs). Mechanistic studies showed that endothelial cells (ECs) that had undergone EC-to-osteoblast (EC-to-OSB) transition, the precursors of tumor-induced OSBs, produced paracrine factors, including Wnts, CXCL14, and lysyl oxidase, which induced M2 polarization and recruited M2-like TAMs to the bone–tumor microenvironment (bone-TME). Bone-TAMs suppressed CD8+ T cells’ proliferation and cytolytic activity, and these effects were partially reversed by treating bone-TAMs with Wnt inhibitors. Genetic or pharmacological inhibition of Pca–induced EC-to-OSB transition reduced the levels of M2-like macrophages in osteogenic tumors. Our study demonstrates that Pca–induced EC-to-OSB transition drives immunosuppression in the bone-TME, suggesting that therapies that reduce Pca–induced bone formation may improve immunotherapeutic outcomes for bmCRPC.
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Yu, G., Corn, P. G., Mak, C. S. L., Liang, X., Zhang, M., Troncoso, P., … Lin, S. H. (2024). Prostate cancer–induced endothelial-cell-to-osteoblast transition drives immunosuppression in the bone–tumor microenvironment through Wnt pathway–induced M2 macrophage polarization. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America, 121(33). https://doi.org/10.1073/pnas.2402903121
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