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Figure S6 from HPV16-Expressing Tumors Release Multiple IL1 Ligands to Orchestrate Systemic Immunosuppression Whose Disruption Enables Efficacy of a Therapeutic Vaccine

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journal contribution
posted on 2025-07-03, 07:20 authored by Morgane Lecointre, Jérémy Guillot, Rachel Marcone, Dilara Ozdoganlar, Marjorie Cayatte, Elin Jaensson Gyllenbäck, David Liberg, Nadine Fournier, Krisztian Homicsko, Douglas Hanahan
<p>IL1RAP blockade increases the proportion of neutrophils expressing antigen presentation-related markers.</p>

Funding

European Research Council (ERC)

Swiss National Science Foundation (SNF)

Ludwig Institute for Cancer Research (LICR)

Cancera Foundation, Lund, Sweden

Paulssons Foundations, Lund, Sweden

Goran Grosskopf, Lund, Sweden

History

ARTICLE ABSTRACT

It is well-established that symptomatic cancers evade immune destruction by coalescing tumor microenvironments to suppress adaptive immunity. Additionally, mouse models of cervical and other cancers have revealed a capability of tumors to systemically induce the expansion of neutrophils that cripple T-cell development in spleen and lymph nodes, further impairing immune responses. Now we show that human papillomavirus type 16 (HPV16)–driven squamous cell tumors in the cervix and skin release into the circulatory system four immunoregulatory ligands – IL-1α, IL-1β, IL-33, and IL-36β – that bias the bone marrow toward granulocytic myelopoiesis, producing immunosuppressive neutrophils populating spleens and tumors. An IL-1 family coreceptor antagonist, anti-IL1RAP, abrogates this neutrophil expansion and complements an otherwise inefficacious HPV16 E7 peptide vaccine to elicit an effective antitumor immune response that is further sustained by anti–CTLA-4. Evidence for similarly IL-1–driven systemic immunosuppression in human cervical tumors encourages evaluation of this combinatorial therapeutic strategy for treating a largely immunoevasive cancer type. Cervical cancer is the fourth leading cause of cancer deaths in women worldwide. Although the disease is driven by two antigenic viral oncoproteins, therapeutic vaccines have proved ineffective, inferentially due to systemic immunosuppression. This study elucidated an actionable mechanism, whose disruption renders an oncoprotein vaccine efficacious, with translational potential.