The limited efficacy of immunotherapies against glioblastoma illustrates the urgent need to better understand the interactions between the central nervous system and the immune system. Here, we showed that a protective response to anti-CTLA-4 therapy depended on a mutualistic relationship between microglia and CD4+ T cells. Suppression of gliomas by CD4+ T cells did not require tumor-intrinsic MHC-II expression, but rather was dependent on the selective expression of MHC-II and antigen presentation by local microglia that in turn, sustained CD4+ T cell tumoricidal effector functions. CD4+ T cell secretion of IFN-gamma made the glioma cells vulnerable to enhanced tumor surveillance and phagocytosis by microglia via the AXL/MER tyrosine kinase receptors that were necessary for tumor suppression. This work illustrates a novel partnership between CD4+ T cells and microglia that unleashes the tumoricidal properties of microglia that can be harnessed to improve immunotherapies for glioblastoma.
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