Tumor-associated lymphatic vessels (LVs) play multiple roles during tumor progression, including promotion of metastasis and regulation of antitumor immune responses by delivering antigen from the tumor bed to draining lymph nodes (LNs). Under steady-state conditions, LN resident lymphatic endothelial cells (LECs) have been found to maintain peripheral tolerance by directly inhibiting autoreactive T-cells. Similarly, tumor-associated lymphatic endothelium has been suggested to reduce antitumor T-cell responses, but the mechanisms that mediate this effect have not been clarified. Using two distinct experimental tumor models, we found that tumor-associated LVs gain expression of the T-cell inhibitory molecule PDL1, similar to LN resident LECs, whereas tumor-associated blood vessels downregulate PDL1. The observed lymphatic upregulation of PDL1 was likely due to IFN-g released by stromal cells in the tumor microenvironment. Furthermore, we found that blocking PDL1 results in increased T-cell stimulation by antigen-presenting LECs in vitro. Taken together, our data suggest that peripheral, tumor-associated lymphatic endothelium contributes to T-cell inhibition, by a mechanism similar to peripheral tolerance maintenance described for LN resident LECs. These findings may have clinical implications for cancer therapy, as lymphatic expression of PDL1 could represent a new biomarker to select patients for immunotherapy with PD1 or PDL1 inhibitors.
Tumor‐associated lymphangiogenesis and lymphatic invasion of tumor cells correlate with poor outcome in many tumor types, including breast cancer. Various explanations for this correlation have been suggested in the past, including the promotion of lymphatic metastasis and an immune‐inhibitory function of lymphatic endothelial cells (LECs). However, the molecular features of tumor‐associated lymphatic vessels and their implications for tumor progression have been poorly characterized. Here, we report the first transcriptional analysis of tumor‐associated LECs directly isolated from the primary tumor in an orthotopic mouse model of triple negative breast cancer (4T1). Gene expression analysis showed a strong upregulation of inflammation‐associated genes, including endothelial adhesion molecules such as VCAM‐1, in comparison to LECs derived from control tissue. In vitro experiments demonstrated that VCAM‐1 is not involved in the adhesion of tumor cells to LECs but unexpectedly promoted lymphatic permeability by weakening of lymphatic junctions, most likely through a mechanism triggered by interactions with integrin α4 which was also induced in tumor‐associated LECs. In line with this, in vivo blockade of VCAM‐1 reduced lymphatic invasion of 4T1 cells. Taken together, our findings suggest that disruption of lymphatic junctions and increased permeability via tumor‐induced lymphatic VCAM‐1 expression may represent a new target to block lymphatic invasion and metastasis.
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