作者
Anita K. Mehta,Emily Cheney,Christina Hartl,Constantia Pantelidou,Madisson Oliwa,Jessica A. Castrillon,Jia‐Ren Lin,Katie E. Hurst,Mateus de Oliveira Taveira,Nathan Johnson,William M. Oldham,Marian Kalocsay,Matthew J. Berberich,Sarah A. Boswell,Aditi Kothari,Shawn F. Johnson,Deborah Dillon,Mikel Lipschitz,Scott J. Rodig,Sandro Santagata,Judy E. Garber,Nadine Tung,José Yélamos,Jessica E. Thaxton,Elizabeth A. Mittendorf,Peter K. Sorger,Geoffrey I. Shapiro,Jennifer L. Guerriero
摘要
Despite objective responses to poly(ADP-ribose) polymerase (PARP) inhibition and improvements in progression-free survival (PFS) compared to standard chemotherapy in patients with BRCA-associated triple-negative breast cancer (TNBC), benefits are transitory. Using high-dimensional single-cell profiling of human TNBC, here we demonstrate that macrophages are the predominant infiltrating immune cell type in breast cancer susceptibility (BRCA)-associated TNBC. Through multi-omics profiling, we show that PARP inhibitors enhance both anti- and pro-tumor features of macrophages through glucose and lipid metabolic reprogramming, driven by the sterol regulatory element-binding protein 1 (SREBF1, SREBP1) pathway. Combining PARP inhibitor therapy with colony-stimulating factor 1 receptor (CSF1R)-blocking antibodies significantly enhanced innate and adaptive antitumor immunity and extended survival in mice with BRCA-deficient tumors in vivo, and this was mediated by CD8+ T cells. Collectively, our results uncover macrophage-mediated immune suppression as a liability of PARP inhibitor treatment and demonstrate that combined PARP inhibition and macrophage-targeting therapy induces a durable reprogramming of the tumor microenvironment (TME), thus constituting a promising therapeutic strategy for TNBC. Mehta et al. show that PARP inhibition induces CSF1R-dependent immune-suppressive macrophages, and that its blockade restores PARP inhibitor efficacy and stimulates CD8+ T cell-dependent antitumor immunity in triple-negative breast cancer.