Shannon Nicole Russell,Constantinos Demetriou,Giampiero Valenzano,Alice C. Evans,Simei Go,Tess A. Stanly,Ahmet Hazini,Frances Willenbrock,Alex Gordon‐Weeks,Somnath Mukherjee,Mathias Tesson,Jennifer P. Morton,Eric O’Neill,Keaton Jones
Background The immune suppression mechanisms in pancreatic ductal adenocarcinoma (PDAC) remain unknown, but preclinical studies have implicated macrophage-mediated immune tolerance. Hence, pathways that regulate macrophage phenotype are of strategic interest, with reprogramming strategies focusing on inhibitors of phosphoinositide 3-kinase-gamma (PI3Kγ) due to restricted immune cell expression. Inhibition of PI3Kγ alone is ineffective in PDAC, despite increased infiltration of CD8+ T cells. Objective We hypothesised that the immune stimulatory effects of radiation, and its ability to boost tumour antigen availability could synergise with PI3Kγ inhibition to augment antitumour immunity. Design We used orthoptic and genetically engineered mouse models of pancreatic cancer (LSL-Kras G12D/+ ;Trp53 R172H/+ ;Pdx1-Cre). Stereotactic radiotherapy was delivered using contrast CT imaging, and PI3Kγ inhibitors by oral administration. Changes in the tumour microenvironment were quantified by flow cytometry, multiplex immunohistochemistry and RNA sequencing. Tumour-educated macrophages were used to investigate efferocytosis, antigen presentation and CD8+ T cell activation. Single-cell RNA sequencing data and fresh tumour samples with autologous macrophages to validate our findings. Results Tumour-associated macrophages that employ efferocytosis to eradicate apoptotic cells can be redirected to present tumour antigens, stimulate CD8+ T cell responses and increase local tumour control. Specifically, we demonstrate how PI3Kγ signalling restricts inflammatory macrophages and that inhibition supports MERTK-dependent efferocytosis. We further find that the combination of PI3Kγ inhibition with targeted radiotherapy stimulates inflammatory macrophages to invoke a pathogen-induced like efferocytosis that switches from immune tolerant to antigen presenting. Conclusions Our data supports a new immunotherapeutic approach and a translational rationale to improve survival in PDAC.