作者
Jiali Yu,Michael D. Green,Shasha Li,Yilun Sun,Sara N. Journey,Jae Eun Choi,Syed Rizvi,Angel Qin,Jessica Waninger,Xueting Lang,Zoey Chopra,Issam El Naqa,Jiajia Zhou,Yingjie Bian,Long Jiang,Alangoya Tezel,Jeremy Skvarce,Rohan K. Achar,Merna Sitto,Benjamin Rosen,Fengyun Su,Sathiya Pandi Narayanan,Xuhong Cao,Shuang Wei,Wojciech Szeliga,Linda Vatan,Charles S. Mayo,Meredith A. Morgan,Caitlin Schonewolf,Kyle C. Cuneo,Ilona Kryczek,Vincent Ma,Christopher D. Lao,Theodore S. Lawrence,Nithya Ramnath,Fei Wen,Arul M. Chinnaiyan,Marcin Cieślik,Ajjai Alva,Weiping Zou
摘要
Metastasis is the primary cause of cancer mortality, and cancer frequently metastasizes to the liver. It is not clear whether liver immune tolerance mechanisms contribute to cancer outcomes. We report that liver metastases diminish immunotherapy efficacy systemically in patients and preclinical models. Patients with liver metastases derive limited benefit from immunotherapy independent of other established biomarkers of response. In multiple mouse models, we show that liver metastases siphon activated CD8+ T cells from systemic circulation. Within the liver, activated antigen-specific Fas+CD8+ T cells undergo apoptosis following their interaction with FasL+CD11b+F4/80+ monocyte-derived macrophages. Consequently, liver metastases create a systemic immune desert in preclinical models. Similarly, patients with liver metastases have reduced peripheral T cell numbers and diminished tumoral T cell diversity and function. In preclinical models, liver-directed radiotherapy eliminates immunosuppressive hepatic macrophages, increases hepatic T cell survival and reduces hepatic siphoning of T cells. Thus, liver metastases co-opt host peripheral tolerance mechanisms to cause acquired immunotherapy resistance through CD8+ T cell deletion, and the combination of liver-directed radiotherapy and immunotherapy could promote systemic antitumor immunity.