학술논문

Macrophages reprogramming improves immunotherapy of IL-33 in peritoneal metastasis of gastric cancer
Document Type
article
Source
EMBO Molecular Medicine, Vol 16, Iss 2, Pp 251-266 (2024)
Subject
IL-33
Gastric Cancer
Peritoneal Metastasis
Tumor Immune Microenvironment
Tumor-associated Macrophages
Medicine (General)
R5-920
Genetics
QH426-470
Language
English
ISSN
1757-4684
Abstract
Abstract Peritoneal metastasis (PM) has a suppressive tumor immune microenvironment (TIME) that limits the effects of immunotherapy. This study aimed to investigate the immunomodulatory effects of intraperitoneal administration of IL-33, a cytokine that is reported to potentiate antitumor immunity and inhibit metastasis. We found survival was significantly prolonged in patients with high IL-33 mRNA expression. In immunocompetent mice, intraperitoneal administration of IL-33 could induce a celiac inflammatory environment, activate immunologic effector cells, and reverse the immunosuppressive tumor microenvironment, which effectively delayed tumor progression and PM of gastric cancer. Mechanistically, IL-33 could induce M2 polarization by activating p38-GATA-binding protein 3 signaling. IL-33 combined with anti-CSF1R or p38 inhibitor to regulate tumor-associated macrophages (TAMs) had a synergistic antitumor effect. Inducing a local inflammatory milieu by IL-33 administration provided a novel approach for treating peritoneal metastasis, which, when combined with TAM reprogramming to reshape TIME, can achieve better treatment efficacy.