Reactive Neutrophil Responses Dependent on the Receptor Tyrosine Kinase c-MET Limit Cancer Immunotherapy

  • Nicole Glodde
  • Tobias Bald
  • Debby van den Boorn-Konijnenberg
  • Kyohei Nakamura
  • Jake S O'Donnell
  • Sabrina Szczepanski
  • Maria Brandes
  • Sarah Eickhoff
  • Indrajit Das
  • Naveen Shridhar
  • Daniel Hinze
  • Meri Rogava
  • Tetje C van der Sluis
  • Janne J Ruotsalainen
  • Evelyn Gaffal
  • Jennifer Landsberg
  • Kerstin U Ludwig
  • Christoph Wilhelm
  • Monika Riek-Burchardt
  • Andreas J Müller
  • Christoffer Gebhardt
  • Richard A Scolyer
  • Georgina V Long
  • Viktor Janzen
  • Michele W L Teng
  • Wolfgang Kastenmüller
  • Massimiliano Mazzone
  • Mark J Smyth
  • Thomas Tüting
  • Michael Hölzel

Abstract

Inhibitors of the receptor tyrosine kinase c-MET are currently used in the clinic to target oncogenic signaling in tumor cells. We found that concomitant c-MET inhibition promoted adoptive T cell transfer and checkpoint immunotherapies in murine cancer models by increasing effector T cell infiltration in tumors. This therapeutic effect was independent of tumor cell-intrinsic c-MET dependence. Mechanistically, c-MET inhibition impaired the reactive mobilization and recruitment of neutrophils into tumors and draining lymph nodes in response to cytotoxic immunotherapies. In the absence of c-MET inhibition, neutrophils recruited to T cell-inflamed microenvironments rapidly acquired immunosuppressive properties, restraining T cell expansion and effector functions. In cancer patients, high serum levels of the c-MET ligand HGF correlated with increasing neutrophil counts and poor responses to checkpoint blockade therapies. Our findings reveal a role for the HGF/c-MET pathway in neutrophil recruitment and function and suggest that c-MET inhibitor co-treatment may improve responses to cancer immunotherapy in settings beyond c-MET-dependent tumors.

Bibliografische Daten

OriginalspracheEnglisch
ISSN1074-7613
DOIs
StatusVeröffentlicht - 17.10.2017
PubMed 29045907