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Systemic Nos2 Depletion and Cox inhibition limits TNBC disease progression and alters lymphoid cell spatial orientation and density

  • Veena Somasundaram
  • , Lisa A. Ridnour
  • , Robert YS Cheng
  • , Abigail J. Walke
  • , Noemi Kedei
  • , Dibyangana D. Bhattacharyya
  • , Adelaide L. Wink
  • , Elijah F. Edmondson
  • , Donna Butcher
  • , Andrew C. Warner
  • , Tiffany H. Dorsey
  • , David A. Scheiblin
  • , William Heinz
  • , Richard J. Bryant
  • , Robert J. Kinders
  • , Stanley Lipkowitz
  • , Stephen TC Wong
  • , Milind Pore
  • , Stephen M. Hewitt
  • , Daniel W. McVicar
  • Stephen K. Anderson, Jenny Chang, Sharon A. Glynn, Stefan Ambs, Stephen J. Lockett, David A. Wink
  • Basic Research Laboratory
  • Cancer Research Technology Program
  • National Cancer Institute (NCI)
  • University of Oxford Medical Sciences Division
  • Joan and Sanford I. Weill Department of Medicine
  • National Institutes of Health (NIH)

Research output: Contribution to a Journal (Peer & Non Peer)Articlepeer-review

19 Citations (Scopus)

Abstract

Antitumor immune polarization is a key predictor of clinical outcomes to cancer therapy. An emerging concept influencing clinical outcome involves the spatial location of CD8+ T cells, within the tumor. Our earlier work demonstrated immunosuppressive effects of NOS2 and COX2 tumor expression. Here, we show that NOS2/COX2 levels influence both the polarization and spatial location of lymphoid cells including CD8+ T cells. Importantly, elevated tumor NOS2/COX2 correlated with exclusion of CD8+ T cells from the tumor epithelium. In contrast, tumors expressing low NOS2/COX2 had increased CD8+ T cell penetration into the tumor epithelium. Consistent with a causative relationship between these observations, pharmacological inhibition of COX2 with indomethacin dramatically reduced tumor growth of the 4T1 model of TNBC in both WT and Nos2- mice. This regimen led to complete tumor regression in ∼20–25% of tumor-bearing Nos2- mice, and these animals were resistant to tumor rechallenge. Th1 cytokines were elevated in the blood of treated mice and intratumoral CD4+ and CD8+ T cells were higher in mice that received indomethacin when compared to control untreated mice. Multiplex immunofluorescence imaging confirmed our phenotyping results and demonstrated that targeted Nos2/Cox2 blockade improved CD8+ T cell penetration into the 4T1 tumor core. These findings are consistent with our observations in low NOS2/COX2 expressing breast tumors proving that COX2 activity is responsible for limiting the spatial distribution of effector T cells in TNBC. Together these results suggest that clinically available NSAID's may provide a cost-effective, novel immunotherapeutic approach for treatment of aggressive tumors including triple negative breast cancer.

Original languageEnglish
Article number102529
JournalRedox Biology
Volume58
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - Dec 2022

UN SDGs

This output contributes to the following UN Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs)

  1. SDG 3 - Good Health and Well-being
    SDG 3 Good Health and Well-being

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