Laboratory(麻豆传媒社区) Associate Professor Mikala Egeblad and her colleagues describe a newly understood way by which breast cancer cells sabotage a key player in the body鈥檚 immune system. That key player provides local immune surveillance by activating killer T-cells, but if it cannot mature and do its job, breast cancer cells can escape detection from the immune system, resulting in unnoticed and unhindered growth.

The scientists found breast cancer cells use a protein on their surface, a so-called cell surface receptor called CCR2, in an unexpected way. It disrupts cross-presenting dendritic cell maturation. This was a surprise because CCR2 has a totally different function in immune cells, which use the receptor to guide themselves to areas of inflammation. However, when CCR2 receptors appear on the surface of tumor cells, they suppress the secretion of a signal that dendritic cells need to mature. The researchers are keen to learn more precisely how cancer cells use CCR2 to suppress those key proteins, but this new research finding is already helpful because CCR2 itself can be targeted. In 2012, the Egeblad lab revealed how blocking CCR2 on immune cells can improve the ability of drugs to penetrate tumors. Now, as a cancer treatment. These latest findings suggest that blocking CCR2 activity can also help the body鈥檚 own immune response to fight cancer. Postdoctoral researcher Miriam Fein adds:
This delves into something that no one was really considering when blocking CCR2. It opens up new ideas to build even better therapies or use existing drugs in different ways.鈥
Miriam Fein
Written by: Brian Stallard, Content Developer/Communicator | publicaffairs@cshl.edu | 516-367-8455
Funding
LaboratoryCancer Center, Department of Defense, the Charles and Marie Robertson Foundation, the Lustgarten Foundation, the National Cancer Institute, the Cedar Hill Foundation, the Rita Allen Foundation, the V Foundation for Cancer Research, and New York State.
Citation
Fein, M., et. al., 鈥淐ancer cell CCR2 orchestrates suppression of the adaptive immune response,鈥 Journal of Experimental Medicine, July 15, 2020
Principal Investigator

Mikala Egeblad
Adjunct Professor
Ph.D., University of Copenhagen and the Danish Cancer Society, 2000