Monitoring melanoma patients on treatment reveals a distinct macrophage population driving targeted therapy resistance

对接受治疗的黑色素瘤患者进行监测发现,存在一种独特的巨噬细胞群,它驱动着靶向治疗耐药性。

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作者:Jelena Vasilevska ,Phil Fang Cheng ,Julia Lehmann ,Egle Ramelyte ,Julia Martínez Gómez ,Florentia Dimitriou ,Federica Sella ,Adrian Salas-Bastos ,Whitney Shannon Jordaan ,Mitchell Paul Levesque ,Reinhard Dummer ,Lukas Sommer

Abstract

Resistance to targeted therapy remains a major clinical challenge in melanoma. To uncover resistance mechanisms, we perform single-cell RNA sequencing on fine-needle aspirates from resistant and responding tumors of patients undergoing BRAFi/MEKi treatment. Among the genes most prominently expressed in resistant tumors is POSTN, predicted to signal to a macrophage population associated with targeted therapy resistance (TTR). Accordingly, tumors from patients with fast disease progression after therapy exhibit high POSTN expression levels and high numbers of TTR macrophages. POSTN polarizes human macrophages toward a TTR phenotype and promotes resistance to targeted therapy in a melanoma mouse model, which is associated with a phenotype change in intratumoral macrophages. Finally, polarized TTR macrophages directly protect human melanoma cells from MEKi-induced killing via CD44 receptor expression on melanoma cells. Thus, interfering with the protective activity of TTR macrophages may offer a strategy to overcome resistance to targeted therapy in melanoma.

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