Interleukin-6/STAT3 pathway signaling drives an inflammatory phenotype in Group A ependymoma
Autor: | Jean M. Mulcahy Levy, Rajeev Vibhakar, Lindsey M. Hoffman, Vladimir Amani, Diane K. Birks, Michael H. Handler, Nicholas K. Foreman, Steffanie L. Furtek, Rebecca J. Josephson, Phillip Reigan, Andrea Griesinger, Andrew M. Donson |
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Jazyk: | angličtina |
Rok vydání: | 2015 |
Předmět: |
STAT3 Transcription Factor
Cancer Research Myeloid Immunology Cell Lipopolysaccharide Receptors Inflammation Apoptosis Biology Article Monocytes Proinflammatory cytokine Paracrine signalling Cell Line Tumor medicine Humans Myeloid Cells Interleukin 8 Phosphorylation STAT3 Interleukin 6 Cell Proliferation Interleukin-6 Gene Expression Profiling Gene Expression Regulation Neoplastic medicine.anatomical_structure Phenotype Ependymoma biology.protein Cytokines medicine.symptom Inflammation Mediators Signal Transduction |
Popis: | Ependymoma (EPN) in childhood is a brain tumor with substantial mortality. Inflammatory response has been identified as a molecular signature of high-risk Group A EPN. To better understand the biology of this phenotype and aid therapeutic development, transcriptomic data from Group A and B EPN patient tumor samples, and additional malignant and normal brain data, were analyzed to identify the mechanism underlying EPN Group A inflammation. Enrichment of IL6 and STAT3 pathway genes were found to distinguish Group A EPN from Group B EPN and other brain tumors, implicating an IL6 activation of STAT3 mechanism. EPN tumor cell growth was shown to be dependent on STAT3 activity, as demonstrated using shRNA knockdown and pharmacologic inhibition of STAT3 that blocked proliferation and induced apoptosis. The inflammatory factors secreted by EPN tumor cells were shown to reprogram myeloid cells, and this paracrine effect was characterized by a significant increase in pSTAT3 and IL8 secretion. Myeloid polarization was shown to be dependent on tumor secretion of IL6, and these effects could be reversed using IL6-neutralizing antibody or IL6 receptor–targeted therapeutic antibody tocilizumab. Polarized myeloid cell production of IL8 drove unpolarized myeloid cells to upregulate CD163 and to produce a number of proinflammatory cytokines. Collectively, these findings indicate that constitutive IL6/STAT3 pathway activation is important in driving tumor growth and inflammatory cross-talk with myeloid cells within the Group A EPN microenvironment. Effective design of Group A–targeted therapy for children with EPN may require reversal of this potentially immunosuppressive and protumor pathway. Cancer Immunol Res; 3(10); 1165–74. ©2015 AACR. |
Databáze: | OpenAIRE |
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