Datta Anisha, Bahlmann Laura C, Gong Diana N, Tevonian Erin N, Lorens James B, Lauffenburger Douglas A
Department of Biological Engineering, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Cambridge, MA, United States.
Department of Biomedicine and Centre for Cancer Biomarkers, University of Bergen, Bergen, Norway.
Front Immunol. 2025 Jun 5;16:1601420. doi: 10.3389/fimmu.2025.1601420. eCollection 2025.
Axl, a member of the receptor tyrosine kinase family comprised of Tyro3, Axl, and MerTK, is a promising cancer therapeutic target actively under clinical investigation. Axl is understood to be a dual target in cancer to (1) prevent tumor cell growth and invasion and (2) potentiate anti-tumor immunity. This immunity is characterized by myeloid cell activation and downstream recruitment and activation of anti-tumor T cells. However, the ways by which Axl inhibition promotes myeloid cell activation in the tumor microenvironment are incompletely understood. There is thus a need to understand the effects of Axl inhibition on myeloid cells in the context of the broader tumor microenvironment. Here, we developed a human model system using primary human monocyte-derived macrophages, primary human monocyte-derived dendritic cells, and Axl-expressing melanoma tumor cells to elucidate the effects of Axl inhibition on the myeloid compartment of the tumor microenvironment. We found that treatment with the Axl-specific small molecule inhibitor bemcentinib yields increased expression of markers of activation in both macrophages and dendritic cells. Interestingly, the addition of dendritic cells to the system appears to dampen macrophage response, suggesting that these cells cooperate to share the burden of the innate immune response. Most importantly, we found that treatment-naïve tumor cells and targeted therapy-treated tumor cells have distinct impacts on macrophage state, and these differences dictate the nature of the immune cell response to Axl inhibition. As a whole, our work highlights the utility of models in unraveling the complex mechanistic effects of Axl inhibition and establishes a robust model system that can be used in future mechanistic drug studies with the potential to inform clinical trial design.
Axl是受体酪氨酸激酶家族的成员之一,该家族由Tyro3、Axl和MerTK组成,是一个正在积极进行临床研究的、很有前景的癌症治疗靶点。人们认为Axl在癌症中具有双重作用:(1)防止肿瘤细胞生长和侵袭;(2)增强抗肿瘤免疫力。这种免疫以髓样细胞激活以及下游抗肿瘤T细胞的募集和激活为特征。然而,Axl抑制在肿瘤微环境中促进髓样细胞激活的方式尚未完全明确。因此,有必要在更广泛的肿瘤微环境背景下了解Axl抑制对髓样细胞的影响。在此,我们利用原代人单核细胞衍生的巨噬细胞、原代人单核细胞衍生的树突状细胞以及表达Axl的黑色素瘤肿瘤细胞,建立了一个人类模型系统,以阐明Axl抑制对肿瘤微环境中髓样细胞区室的影响。我们发现,用Axl特异性小分子抑制剂bemcentinib处理后,巨噬细胞和树突状细胞中激活标志物的表达均增加。有趣的是,向该系统中添加树突状细胞似乎会抑制巨噬细胞的反应,这表明这些细胞协同作用以分担先天免疫反应的负担。最重要的是,我们发现未经治疗的肿瘤细胞和接受靶向治疗的肿瘤细胞对巨噬细胞状态有不同的影响,而这些差异决定了免疫细胞对Axl抑制的反应性质。总体而言,我们的工作突出了模型在揭示Axl抑制的复杂机制效应方面的作用,并建立了一个强大的模型系统,可用于未来的机制性药物研究,有可能为临床试验设计提供参考。