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Journal Article

Innate Immune Training of Granulopoiesis Promotes Anti-tumor Activity

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Murray,  Peter
Murray, Peter / Immunoregulation, Max Planck Institute of Biochemistry, Max Planck Society;

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1-s2.0-S009286742031299X-main.pdf
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1-s2.0-S009286742031299X-mmc1.pdf
(Supplementary material), 251KB

Citation

Kalafati, L., Kourtzelis, I., Schulte-Schrepping, J., Li, X., Hatzioannou, A., Grinenko, T., et al. (2020). Innate Immune Training of Granulopoiesis Promotes Anti-tumor Activity. Cell, 183(3), 771-785.e12. doi:10.1016/j.cell.2020.09.058.


Cite as: https://hdl.handle.net/21.11116/0000-0007-7DD6-C
Abstract
Trained innate immunity, induced via modulation of mature myeloid cells or their bone marrow progenitors, mediates sustained increased responsiveness to secondary challenges. Here, we investigated whether anti-tumor immunity can be enhanced through induction of trained immunity. Pre-treatment of mice with beta-glucan, a fungal-derived prototypical agonist of trained immunity, resulted in diminished tumor growth. The anti-tumor effect of beta-glucan-induced trained immunity was associated with transcriptomic and epigenetic rewiring of granulopoiesis and neutrophil reprogramming toward an anti-tumor phenotype; this process required type I interferon signaling irrespective of adaptive immunity in the host. Adoptive transfer of neutrophils from beta-glucan-trained mice to naive recipients suppressed tumor growth in the latter in a ROS-dependent manner. Moreover, the anti-tumor effect of beta-glucan-induced trained granulopoiesis was transmissible by bone marrow transplantation to recipient naive mice. Our findings identify a novel and therapeutically relevant anti-tumor facet of trained immunity involving appropriate rewiring of granulopoiesis.