Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: https://doi.org/10.3389/fimmu.2023.1211730
Title: Macrophage IL-1 & beta; contributes to tumorigenesis through paracrine AIM2 inflammasome activation in the tumor microenvironment
Authors: Chew, Zhi Huan 
Cui, Jianzhou 
Sachaphibulkij, Karishma 
Tan, Isabelle 
Kar, Shreya
Koh, Kai Kiat
Singh, Kritika
Lim, Hong Meng 
Lee, Soo Chin 
Kumar, Alan Prem 
Gasser, Stephan 
Lim, Lina HK 
Keywords: Science & Technology
Life Sciences & Biomedicine
Immunology
innate immunity
inflammasome
cytosolic DNA
tumor microenvironment
AIM2 inflammasome
DNA SENSOR
CANCER
REPLICATION
REJECTION
PATHWAYS
GENOME
VIRUS
Issue Date: 28-Jun-2023
Publisher: FRONTIERS MEDIA SA
Citation: Chew, Zhi Huan, Cui, Jianzhou, Sachaphibulkij, Karishma, Tan, Isabelle, Kar, Shreya, Koh, Kai Kiat, Singh, Kritika, Lim, Hong Meng, Lee, Soo Chin, Kumar, Alan Prem, Gasser, Stephan, Lim, Lina HK (2023-06-28). Macrophage IL-1 & beta; contributes to tumorigenesis through paracrine AIM2 inflammasome activation in the tumor microenvironment. FRONTIERS IN IMMUNOLOGY 14. ScholarBank@NUS Repository. https://doi.org/10.3389/fimmu.2023.1211730
Abstract: Intracellular recognition of self and non-self -nucleic acids can result in the initiation of effective pro-inflammatory and anti-tumorigenic responses. We hypothesized that macrophages can be activated by tumor-derived nucleic acids to induce inflammasome activation in the tumor microenvironment. We show that tumor conditioned media (CM) can induce IL-1β production, indicative of inflammasome activation in primed macrophages. This could be partially dependent on caspase 1/11, AIM2 and NLRP3. IL-1β enhances tumor cell proliferation, migration and invasion while coculture of tumor cells with macrophages enhances the proliferation of tumor cells, which is AIM2 and caspase 1/11 dependent. Furthermore, we have identified that DNA-RNA hybrids could be the nucleic acid form which activates AIM2 inflammasome at a higher sensitivity as compared to dsDNA. Taken together, the tumor-secretome stimulates an innate immune pathway in macrophages which promotes paracrine cancer growth and may be a key tumorigenic pathway in cancer. Broader understanding on the mechanisms of nucleic acid recognition and interaction with innate immune signaling pathway will help us to better appreciate its potential application in diagnostic and therapeutic benefit in cancer.
Source Title: FRONTIERS IN IMMUNOLOGY
URI: https://scholarbank.nus.edu.sg/handle/10635/243738
ISSN: 1664-3224
DOI: 10.3389/fimmu.2023.1211730
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