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Identification of monocyte-like precursors of granulocytes in cancer as a mechanism for accumulation of PMN-MDSCs.
Authors
Scott I. Abrams
Joseph Bennett
+23 more
Thomas Condamine
George Dominguez
Laxminarasimha Donthireddy
Shuyu Fu
Dmitry I. Gabrilovich
Michael Guarino
Andrew V Kossenkov
Amit Kumar
Lucia R. Languino
Sergio Lavilla-Alonso
Cindy Lin
Gregory Masters
Jérôme Mastio
Charles Mulligan
Brian Nam
Yulia Nefedova
Alexander T. Polo
Evgenii N Tcyganov
Filippo Veglia
Patrick Viatour
Robert H. Vonderheide
Fang Wang
Jie Zhou
Publication date
2 September 2019
Publisher
Jefferson Digital Commons
Abstract
We have identified a precursor that differentiates into granulocytes in vitro and in vivo yet belongs to the monocytic lineage. We have termed these cells monocyte-like precursors of granulocytes (MLPGs). Under steady state conditions, MLPGs were absent in the spleen and barely detectable in the bone marrow (BM). In contrast, these cells significantly expanded in tumor-bearing mice and differentiated to polymorphonuclear myeloid-derived suppressor cells (PMN-MDSCs). Selective depletion of monocytic cells had no effect on the number of granulocytes in naive mice but decreased the population of PMN-MDSCs in tumor-bearing mice by 50%. The expansion of MLPGs was found to be controlled by the down-regulation of Rb1, but not IRF8, which is known to regulate the expansion of PMN-MDSCs from classic granulocyte precursors. In cancer patients, putative MLPGs were found within the population of CXCR1+CD15-CD14+HLA-DR-/lo monocytic cells. These findings describe a mechanism of abnormal myelopoiesis in cancer and suggest potential new approaches for selective targeting of MDSCs. © 2019 Mastio et al
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Last time updated on 28/10/2019