6533b85bfe1ef96bd12bb6c6

RESEARCH PRODUCT

Accumulation of Circulating CCR7+ Natural Killer Cells Marks Melanoma Evolution and Reveals a CCL19-Dependent Metastatic Pathway

Cinzia GarofaloMariaelena CaponeSilvia PesceEmanuela MarcenaroRossana TallericoGenny Del ZottoKlas KärreValter AgostiTiziana ApuzzoPaolo A. AsciertoAntonio M. GrimaldiAlice TurdoCostanza Maria CristianiFrancesco CostanzoAroldo RizzoEnnio CarboneEmilia Dora GiovannoneElio GullettaMatilde TodaroAlessandro MorettaGabriele MadonnaValeria VenturaDomenico Mallardo

subject

0301 basic medicinecancer stem cellCancer ResearchT cellImmunologyCellchemical and pharmacologic phenomenaBiologyMetastasis03 medical and health sciences0302 clinical medicineImmune systemCancer stem cellmedicineNK cellMelanomaneoplasmsimmune surveillanceMelanomaCCL19medicine.diseaseImmune checkpoint030104 developmental biologymedicine.anatomical_structure030220 oncology & carcinogenesisCancer researchmetastasi

description

Abstract Immune checkpoint blockade therapy has changed prognoses for many melanoma patients. However, immune responses that correlate with clinical progression of the disease are still poorly understood. To identify immune responses correlating with melanoma clinical evolution, we analyzed serum cytokines as well as circulating NK and T-cell subpopulations from melanoma patients. The patients' immune profiles suggested that melanoma progression leads to changes in peripheral blood NK and T-cell subsets. Stage IV melanoma was characterized by an increased frequency of CCR7+CD56bright NK cells as well as high serum concentrations of the CCR7 ligand CCL19. CCR7 expression and CCL19 secretion were also observed in melanoma cell lines. The CCR7+ melanoma cell subpopulation coexpressed PD-L1 and Galectin-9 and had stemness properties. Analysis of melanoma-derived cancer stem cells (CSC) showed high CCR7 expression; these CSCs were efficiently recognized and killed by NK cells. An accumulation of CCR7+, PD-L1+, and Galectin-9+ melanoma cells in melanoma metastases was demonstrated ex vivo. Altogether, our data identify biomarkers that may mark a CCR7-driven metastatic melanoma pathway.

10.1158/2326-6066.cir-18-0651http://hdl.handle.net/11591/422196