Glioma-derived IL-33 orchestrates an inflammatory brain tumor microenvironment that accelerates glioma progression

Author:

De Boeck Astrid,Ahn Bo Young,D’Mello Charlotte,Lun Xueqing,Menon Shyam V.,Alshehri Mana M.,Szulzewsky FrankORCID,Shen Yaoqing,Khan Lubaba,Dang Ngoc Ha,Reichardt ElliottORCID,Goring Kimberly-Ann,King Jennifer,Grisdale Cameron J.ORCID,Grinshtein Natalie,Hambardzumyan Dolores,Reilly Karlyne M.,Blough Michael D.,Cairncross J. Gregory,Yong V. Wee,Marra Marco A.ORCID,Jones Steven J. M.ORCID,Kaplan David R.,McCoy Kathy D.ORCID,Holland Eric C.ORCID,Bose Pinaki,Chan Jennifer A.ORCID,Robbins Stephen M.,Senger Donna L.

Abstract

AbstractDespite a deeper molecular understanding, human glioblastoma remains one of the most treatment refractory and fatal cancers. It is known that the presence of macrophages and microglia impact glioblastoma tumorigenesis and prevent durable response. Herein we identify the dual function cytokine IL-33 as an orchestrator of the glioblastoma microenvironment that contributes to tumorigenesis. We find that IL-33 expression in a large subset of human glioma specimens and murine models correlates with increased tumor-associated macrophages/monocytes/microglia. In addition, nuclear and secreted functions of IL-33 regulate chemokines that collectively recruit and activate circulating and resident innate immune cells creating a pro-tumorigenic environment. Conversely, loss of nuclear IL-33 cripples recruitment, dramatically suppresses glioma growth, and increases survival. Our data supports the paradigm that recruitment and activation of immune cells, when instructed appropriately, offer a therapeutic strategy that switches the focus from the cancer cell alone to one that includes the normal host environment.

Funder

Terry Fox Research Institute

Gouvernement du Canada | Canadian Institutes of Health Research

Publisher

Springer Science and Business Media LLC

Subject

General Physics and Astronomy,General Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology,General Chemistry

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