Abstract
SUMMARYMetastases arise from disseminated cancer cells (DCCs) that detach from the primary tumor and seed distant organs. There, quiescent DCCs can survive for an extended time, a state referred to as metastatic dormancy. The mechanisms governing the induction, maintenance, and awakening from metastatic dormancy are unclear. We show that the differentiation of dormancy-inducing CD8+T cells requires CD4+T cell help, and that IFNγ directly induces dormancy in DCCs. The maintenance of metastatic dormancy, however, is independent of T cells. Instead, awakening from dormancy requires an inflammatory signal, and we identified CD4+T cell-derived IL- 17A as an essential wake-up signal for dormant DCCs in the lungs.Thus, the induction and awakening from metastatic dormancy require an external stimulus, while the maintenance of dormancy does not rely on the continuous surveillance by lymphocytes.
Publisher
Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory