Nociceptor neurons affect cancer immunosurveillance

Mohammad Balood(Université Laval), Maryam Ahmadi(Université de Montréal), Tuany Eichwald(Universidade Federal de Santa Catarina), Ali Ahmadi(Université de Montréal), Abdelilah Majdoubi(Université de Montréal), Karine Roversi(Université de Montréal), Katiane Roversi(Université de Montréal), Christopher T. Lucido(Sanford Research), Anthony Restaino(Sanford Research), Siyi Huang(Cygnal Therapeutics (United States)), Lexiang Ji(Cygnal Therapeutics (United States)), Kai‐Chih Huang(Cygnal Therapeutics (United States)), Elise Semerena(Université de Montréal), Sini C. Thomas(Université de Montréal), Alexandro E. Trevino(Boston Children's Hospital), Hannah Merrison(Boston Children's Hospital), Alexandre Parrin(Boston Children's Hospital), Benjamin Doyle(Boston Children's Hospital), Daniel W. Vermeer(Sanford Research), William C. Spanos(Sanford Research), Caitlin S. Williamson(Sanford Research), Corey R. Seehus(Boston Children's Hospital), Simmie L. Foster(Massachusetts General Hospital), Hongyue Dai(Cygnal Therapeutics (United States)), Chengyi J. Shu(Cygnal Therapeutics (United States)), Manu Rangachari(Université Laval), Jacques Thibodeau(Université de Montréal), Sonia V. del Rincón(McGill University), Ronny Drapkin(Cancer Research Center), Moutih Rafei(Université de Montréal), Nader Ghasemlou(Queen's University), Paola D. Vermeer(Sanford Research), Clifford J. Woolf(Boston Children's Hospital), Sébastien Talbot(Queen's University)
Nature
November 2, 2022
Cited by 310Open Access
Full Text

Abstract

Abstract Solid tumours are innervated by nerve fibres that arise from the autonomic and sensory peripheral nervous systems 1–5 . Whether the neo-innervation of tumours by pain-initiating sensory neurons affects cancer immunosurveillance remains unclear. Here we show that melanoma cells interact with nociceptor neurons, leading to increases in their neurite outgrowth, responsiveness to noxious ligands and neuropeptide release. Calcitonin gene-related peptide (CGRP)—one such nociceptor-produced neuropeptide—directly increases the exhaustion of cytotoxic CD8 + T cells, which limits their capacity to eliminate melanoma. Genetic ablation of the TRPV1 lineage, local pharmacological silencing of nociceptors and antagonism of the CGRP receptor RAMP1 all reduced the exhaustion of tumour-infiltrating leukocytes and decreased the growth of tumours, nearly tripling the survival rate of mice that were inoculated with B16F10 melanoma cells. Conversely, CD8 + T cell exhaustion was rescued in sensory-neuron-depleted mice that were treated with local recombinant CGRP. As compared with wild-type CD8 + T cells, Ramp1 −/ − CD8 + T cells were protected against exhaustion when co-transplanted into tumour-bearing Rag1 -deficient mice. Single-cell RNA sequencing of biopsies from patients with melanoma revealed that intratumoral RAMP1 -expressing CD8 + T cells were more exhausted than their RAMP1 -negative counterparts, whereas overexpression of RAMP1 correlated with a poorer clinical prognosis. Overall, our results suggest that reducing the release of CGRP from tumour-innervating nociceptors could be a strategy to improve anti-tumour immunity by eliminating the immunomodulatory effects of CGRP on cytotoxic CD8 + T cells.


Related Papers

No related papers found

Powered by citation graph analysis