Litcius/Paper detail

Dual roles of neutrophils in metastatic colonization are governed by the host NK cell status

Peishan Li, Ming Lü, Jiayuan Shi, Li Hua, Zheng Gong, Qing Li, Leonard D. Shultz, Guangwen Ren

2020Nature Communications157 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

The role of neutrophils in solid tumor metastasis remains largely controversial. In preclinical models of solid tumors, both pro-metastatic and anti-metastatic effects of neutrophils have been reported. In this study, using mouse models of breast cancer, we demonstrate that the metastasis-modulating effects of neutrophils are dictated by the status of host natural killer (NK) cells. In NK cell-deficient mice, granulocyte colony-stimulating factor-expanded neutrophils show an inhibitory effect on the metastatic colonization of breast tumor cells in the lung. In contrast, in NK cell-competent mice, neutrophils facilitate metastatic colonization in the same tumor models. In an ex vivo neutrophil-NK cell-tumor cell tri-cell co-culture system, neutrophils are shown to potentially suppress the tumoricidal activity of NK cells, while neutrophils themselves are tumoricidal. Intriguingly, these two modulatory effects by neutrophils are both mediated by reactive oxygen species. Collectively, the absence or presence of NK cells, governs the net tumor-modulatory effects of neutrophils.

Topics & Concepts

ColonizationHost (biology)Dual (grammatical number)Dual roleBiologyImmunologyMicrobiologyEcologyChemistryLiteratureCombinatorial chemistryArtImmune cells in cancerNeutrophil, Myeloperoxidase and Oxidative MechanismsInflammatory Biomarkers in Disease Prognosis