Resident Kupffer cells and neutrophils drive liver toxicity in cancer immunotherapy

常驻库普弗细胞和中性粒细胞在癌症免疫治疗中引起肝毒性

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作者:Marie Siwicki, Nicolas A Gort-Freitas, Marius Messemaker, Ruben Bill, Jeremy Gungabeesoon, Camilla Engblom, Rapolas Zilionis, Christopher Garris, Genevieve M Gerhard, Anna Kohl, Yunkang Lin, Angela E Zou, Chiara Cianciaruso, Evangelia Bolli, Christina Pfirschke, Yi-Jang Lin, Cecile Piot, John E Mind

Abstract

Immunotherapy is revolutionizing cancer treatment but is often restricted by toxicities. What distinguishes adverse events from concomitant antitumor reactions is poorly understood. Here, using anti-CD40 treatment in mice as a model of TH1-promoting immunotherapy, we showed that liver macrophages promoted local immune-related adverse events. Mechanistically, tissue-resident Kupffer cells mediated liver toxicity by sensing lymphocyte-derived IFN-γ and subsequently producing IL-12. Conversely, dendritic cells were dispensable for toxicity but drove tumor control. IL-12 and IFN-γ were not toxic themselves but prompted a neutrophil response that determined the severity of tissue damage. We observed activation of similar inflammatory pathways after anti-PD-1 and anti-CTLA-4 immunotherapies in mice and humans. These findings implicated macrophages and neutrophils as mediators and effectors of aberrant inflammation in TH1-promoting immunotherapy, suggesting distinct mechanisms of toxicity and antitumor immunity.

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