Product Citations: 1

Tumor endothelial cell autophagy is a key vascular-immune checkpoint in melanoma.

In EMBO Molecular Medicine on 7 December 2023 by Verhoeven, J., Jacobs, K. A., et al.

Tumor endothelial cells (TECs) actively repress inflammatory responses and maintain an immune-excluded tumor phenotype. However, the molecular mechanisms that sustain TEC-mediated immunosuppression remain largely elusive. Here, we show that autophagy ablation in TECs boosts antitumor immunity by supporting infiltration and effector function of T-cells, thereby restricting melanoma growth. In melanoma-bearing mice, loss of TEC autophagy leads to the transcriptional expression of an immunostimulatory/inflammatory TEC phenotype driven by heightened NF-kB and STING signaling. In line, single-cell transcriptomic datasets from melanoma patients disclose an enriched InflammatoryHigh /AutophagyLow TEC phenotype in correlation with clinical responses to immunotherapy, and responders exhibit an increased presence of inflamed vessels interfacing with infiltrating CD8+ T-cells. Mechanistically, STING-dependent immunity in TECs is not critical for the immunomodulatory effects of autophagy ablation, since NF-kB-driven inflammation remains functional in STING/ATG5 double knockout TECs. Hence, our study identifies autophagy as a principal tumor vascular anti-inflammatory mechanism dampening melanoma antitumor immunity.
© 2023 The Authors. Published under the terms of the CC BY 4.0 license.

  • FC/FACS
  • Mus musculus (House mouse)
  • Biochemistry and Molecular biology
  • Cancer Research
  • Cell Biology
  • Immunology and Microbiology
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