Dan Chen,Siva Karthik Varanasi,Toshiro Hara,Kacie A. Traina,Ming Sun,Bryan McDonald,Yagmur Farsakoglu,Josh Clanton,Shihao Xu,Lizmarie Garcia-Rivera,Thomas H. Mann,Victor Y. Du,H. Kay Chung,Ziyan Xu,Victoria Tripple,Eduardo Casillas,Shixin Ma,Carolyn O’Connor,Qiyuan Yang,Ye Zheng,Tony Hunter,Greg Lemke,Susan M. Kaech
The limited efficacy of immunotherapies against glioblastoma underscores the urgency of better understanding immunity in the central nervous system. We found that treatment with αCTLA-4, but not αPD-1, prolonged survival in a mouse model of mesenchymal-like glioblastoma. This effect was lost upon the depletion of CD4+ T cells but not CD8+ T cells. αCTLA-4 treatment increased frequencies of intratumoral IFNγ-producing CD4+ T cells, and IFNγ blockade negated the therapeutic impact of αCTLA-4. The anti-tumor activity of CD4+ T cells did not require tumor-intrinsic MHC-II expression but rather required conventional dendritic cells as well as MHC-II expression on microglia. CD4+ T cells interacted directly with microglia, promoting IFNγ-dependent microglia activation and phagocytosis via the AXL/MER tyrosine kinase receptors, which were necessary for tumor suppression. Thus, αCTLA-4 blockade in mesenchymal-like glioblastoma promotes a CD4+ T cell-microglia circuit wherein IFNγ triggers microglia activation and phagocytosis and microglia in turn act as antigen-presenting cells fueling the CD4+ T cell response.