Oral squamous carcinoma cells promote macrophage polarization in an MIF-dependent manner

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Abstract

Background: Tumor-associated macrophages (TAMs) are important determinants of intratumoral immune evasion, neoan-giogenesis, extracellular matrix remodeling and dysregulated tumor cell proliferation. Our prior studies revealed that macrophage-derived, but not tumor cell-derived, macrophage migration inhibitory factor (MIF), is an important determinant of TAM alternative activation and M2 polarization. Aim: Because MIF is historically thought to initiate signaling via a receptor-dependent, outside-in mode of action, we wished to investigate the specific contributions of tumor-derived vs. macrophage-derived MIF to M2 marker expression during macrophage polarization. Design: Murine oral squamous cell-carcinoma cells (SCCVII) were co-cultured with either the RAW 264.7 mouse macrophage cell line or mouse primary bone marrow-derived macrophages in the context of MIF genetic loss/inhibition individually or in combination each cell type. Methods: Twelve well Transwell plates were used to co-culture SCCVII cells and RAW 264.7, MIFþ/þ or MIF/ macrophages treated with/without the small molecule MIF inhibitor, 4-iodo-6-phenylpyrimidine and incubated in the presence or absence of interleukin (IL-4) for 48 h. Macrophages were analyzed by quantitative real-time polymerase chain reaction and/or immunoblotting for relative macrophage polarization marker expression. Results: IL-4 treatment synergizes with SCCVII co-culture in inducing the expression of macrophage M2 markers and loss or inhibition of macrophage-derived MIF significantly reduces both IL-4 alone and IL-4/SCCVII co-culture-induced macrophage M2 marker expression. Conclusion: These studies identify an important and dominant requirement for macrophage MIF in maximal Th2-cytokine and oral squamous carcinoma cell-induced macrophage polarization and M2 marker expression.

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De Souza Rizzo, M. B., De Carvalho, M. B., Kim, E. J., Rendon, B. E., Noe, J. T., Darlene Wise, A., & Mitchell, R. A. (2018). Oral squamous carcinoma cells promote macrophage polarization in an MIF-dependent manner. QJM: An International Journal of Medicine , 111(11), 769–778. https://doi.org/10.1093/qjmed/hcy163

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