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Browsing by Author "Russier, Marion"

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    Neuroblastoma Formation Requires Unconventional CD4 T Cells and Arginase-1–Dependent Myeloid Cells
    (American Association for Cancer Research, 2021) Van de Velde, Lee-Ann; Allen, E. Kaitlynn; Crawford, Jeremy Chase; Wilson, Taylor L.; Guy, Clifford S.; Russier, Marion; Zeitler, Leonie; Bahrami, Armita; Finkelstein, David; Pelletier, Stephane; Schultz-Cherry, Stacey; Thomas, Paul G.; Murray, Peter J.; Medicine, School of Medicine
    Immune cells regulate tumor growth by mirroring their function as tissue repair organizers in normal tissues. To understand the different facets of immune-tumor collaboration through genetics, spatial transcriptomics, and immunologic manipulation with noninvasive, longitudinal imaging, we generated a penetrant double oncogene-driven autochthonous model of neuroblastoma. Spatial transcriptomic analysis showed that CD4+ and myeloid populations colocalized within the tumor parenchyma, while CD8+ T cells and B cells were peripherally dispersed. Depletion of CD4+ T cells or CCR2+ macrophages, but not B cells, CD8+ T cells, or natural killer (NK) cells, prevented tumor formation. Tumor CD4+ T cells displayed unconventional phenotypes and were clonotypically diverse and antigen independent. Within the myeloid fraction, tumor growth required myeloid cells expressing arginase-1. Overall, these results demonstrate how arginine-metabolizing myeloid cells conspire with pathogenic CD4+ T cells to create permissive conditions for tumor formation, suggesting that these protumorigenic pathways could be disabled by targeting myeloid arginine metabolism. SIGNIFICANCE: A new model of human neuroblastoma provides ways to track tumor formation and expansion in living animals, allowing identification of CD4+ T-cell and macrophage functions required for oncogenesis.
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