Microenvironmental IL-6 inhibits anti-cancer immune responses generated by cytotoxic chemotherapy

Eric H. Bent(Allen Institute), Luis R. Millán-Barea(Allen Institute), Iris Zhuang(Allen Institute), Daniel R. Goulet(Allen Institute), Julia Fröse(Allen Institute), Michael T. Hemann(IIT@MIT)
Nature Communications
October 28, 2021
Cited by 149Open Access
Full Text

Abstract

Abstract Cytotoxic chemotherapeutics primarily function through DNA damage-induced tumor cell apoptosis, although the inflammation provoked by these agents can stimulate anti-cancer immune responses. The mechanisms that control these distinct effects and limit immunogenic responses to DNA-damage mediated cell death in vivo are currently unclear. Using a mouse model of BCR-ABL + B-cell acute lymphoblastic leukemia, we show that chemotherapy-induced anti-cancer immunity is suppressed by the tumor microenvironment through production of the cytokine IL-6. The chemotherapeutic doxorubicin is curative in IL-6-deficient mice through the induction of CD8 + T-cell-mediated anti-cancer responses, while moderately extending lifespan in wild type tumor-bearing mice. We also show that IL-6 suppresses the effectiveness of immune-checkpoint inhibition with anti-PD-L1 blockade. Our results suggest that IL-6 is a key regulator of anti-cancer immune responses induced by genotoxic stress and that its inhibition can switch cancer cell clearance from primarily apoptotic to immunogenic, promoting and maintaining durable anti-tumor immune responses.


Related Papers

No related papers found

Powered by citation graph analysis