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Published OnlineFirst May 14, 2015; DOI: 10.1158/0008-5472.CAN-14-2386 Cancer Research Microenvironment and Immunology Breast Cancer Cell–Derived GM-CSF Licenses Regulatory Th2 Induction by Plasmacytoid Predendritic Cells in Aggressive Disease Subtypes € l Zollinger1,2, Cristina Ghirelli1,2, Fabien Reyal3,4, Marine Jeanmougin1,2, Raphae 1,2 1,2 5,6,7 Philemon Sirven , Paula Michea , Christophe Caux , Nathalie Bendriss-Vermare5,6,7, 1,2 8 le ne Donnadieu , Martial Caly , Virginie Fourchotte4, Anne Vincent-Salomon8, Marie-He Brigitte Sigal-Zafrani8, Xavier Sastre-Garau8, and Vassili Soumelis1,2,9 Abstract Reciprocal interactions between tumor cells and their microenvironment vitally impact tumor progression. In this study, we show that GM-CSF produced by primary breast tumor cells induced the activation of plasmacytoid predendritic cells (pDC), a cell type critical to anti-viral immunity. pDC that expressed the GM-CSF receptor were increased in breast tumors compared with noninvolved adjacent breast tissue. Tumoractivated pDC acquired na€ve CD4þ T-cell stimulatory capacity and promoted a regulatory Th2 response. Finally, the concomitant increase of GM-CSF and pDC was significantly associated with relatively more aggressive breast cancer subtypes. Our results characterize the first tumor-derived factor that can activate pDC to promote a regulatory Th2 response, with implications for therapeutic targeting of a tumor-immune axis of growing recognition in its significance to cancer. Cancer Introduction tumor cells in the form of a complex network (2, 5, 6). Deciphering this network relies in large parts on identifying links between soluble factors and their target cells. This is important because the soluble microenvironment, cytokines in particular, shapes the cellular microenvironment by modulating major cellular pathways, such as survival, differentiation, and specialized effector functions. Such cellular cross-talks may critically influence tumor prognosis through mutual interactions between tumor cells and their microenvironment (1, 4, 5). Using a systematic methodologic framework based on the study of human primary tumors, we identified breast cancerderived GM-CSF as an endogenous activating signal for plasmacytoid predendritic cells (pDC), a key cell type in anti-viral immunity (10). Tumor-primed pDC in turn polarized the immune response toward a regulatory Th2 profile. Importantly, the GM-CSF/pDC axis was significantly associated to the more aggressive breast cancer subtypes. Cancer is associated with disruption of tissue architecture, which, together with the oncogenic process, promotes the elaboration of proinflammatory signals (1) that lead to a state of chronic inflammation (2–5). There are many evidences that inflammation plays a key role in cancer development (6). Inflammatory cytokines, such as TNF, have been attributed immune activating but also immune-suppressive functions in various mouse tumor models (7, 8). IL6 produced by human tumors inhibits DC differentiation and promotes tumor development (9). Hence, there is increasing evidence that the proinflammatory cytokine microenvironment of tumors has the ability to shape the immune response and influence tumor outcome. In addition to soluble factors, the tumor is infiltrated by a diversity of stromal cells, including immune cells such as lymphocytes, dendritic cells (DC), and macrophages, interacting with Res; 75(14); 1–13. 2015 AACR. Materials and Methods 1 2 INSERM U932, Institut Curie, Paris, France. Institut Curie, Department of Immunology, Paris, France. 3UMR144 CNRS, Institut Curie, Paris, France. 4Institut Curie, Department of Surgical Oncology, Paris, Lyon 1, Lyon, France. 6INSERM U1052/CNRS France. 5Universite rologie de Lyon, Lyon, UMR5286, Centre de Recherche en Cance on Be rard, Lyon, France. 8Institut Curie, Department France. 7Centre Le 9 of Pathology, Paris, France. Center of Clinical Investigations, CurieIGR, Paris-Villejuif, France. Note: Supplementary data for this article are available at Cancer Research Online (http://cancerres.aacrjournals.org/). Corresponding Author: Vassili Soumelis, Institut Curie, 26 rue d'Ulm, 75005 Paris, France. Phone: 33-44-32–27; Fax: 33-53-10-40-25; E-mail: [email protected] doi: 10.1158/0008-5472.CAN-14-2386 2015 American Association for Cancer Research. Primary samples Healthy donor human blood buffy coats were obtained from "Etablissement Français du Sang," Paris, Saint-Antoine Crozatier blood bank through an approved convention with the Institut Curie (Paris, France). Tumor and juxtatumor tissue were collected during standard surgical procedures as surgical residues. They were obtained through the Institut Curie Center for Biological Resources, which has received regulatory approval for the creation and use of biologic sample collections. The study was approved by the Institut Curie Institutional Review Board, and was performed according to national regulatory rules. All patients and healthy donors gave informed consent for research use of their biologic material in accordance with the declaration of Helsinki. www.aacrjournals.org Downloaded from cancerres.aacrjournals.org on June 16, 2017. © 2015 American Association for Cancer Research. OF1 Published OnlineFirst May 14, 2015; DOI: 10.1158/0008-5472.CAN-14-2386 Ghirelli et al. pDC purification Peripheral blood mononuclear cells (PBMC) were isolated using Ficoll-gradient (Amersham). pDC were isolated by flow cytometry as LinCD11cCD4þ as previously described (11). Purity was higher than 98%. Cell line culture We collected cell lines originating from different organs: 6 breast cancer cell lines (BT-20, BT-474, MDA-MB-231, MCF7, SK-BR-3, T47D); 2 colon cancer cell lines (HT-29, LS1034); 3 ovarian cancer cell lines (IGROV-1, SHIN3, SKOV-3); 1 lung cancer cell line (A549); 1 bladder cancer cell line (ECV-304); 1 bone osteosarcoma cell line (MG63); 1 pancreatic cancer cell line (PANC-1) and 1 prostate cancer cell line (PC-3). MCF7, SHIN-3, and PANC-1 were a kind gift from Dr. Claudia Cabella (Colleretto Giacosa, Torino, Italy). ECV-304 and MG-63 were a kind gift from Dr. Barbara Canepa (Colleretto Giacosa, Torino, Italy). All cell lines were cultured without stimulation at the density of 0.5 106 cells/mL in complete RPMI GlutaMAX (Gibco) containing 10% FBS (HyClone). Supernatants were collected after 48 hours of culture, aliquoted at 80 C and then used to quantify cytokines and stimulate pDC in culture. All cell lines were mycoplasma free. pDC culture pDC were cultured at the density of 106 cells/mL in complete RPMI GlutaMAX (Gibco) containing 10% FBS (HyClone). The culture conditions were the following: recombinant IL3, GM-CSF (both R&D Systems), TNF (Peprotech), and IL6 (Miltenyi) were used at 10 ng/mL to stimulate pDC for 48 hours. For GM-CSF titration experiments, pDC were stimulated for 48 hours with recombinant GM-CSF concentrations from 104 to 103 ng/mL. CpG-C (a kind gift from Dr. Franck J. Barrat, Dynavax Technologies Corporation, Berkeley, California) was used to stimulate pDC at 5 mg/mL for 48 hours. In separate experiments, pDC were cultured for 48 hours with cell lines supernatants or primary breast tumor and juxtatumor supernatants diluted 1/10. pDC viability pDC viability was assessed by measuring the percentage of 4,6diamidino-2-phenylindole (DAPI)-negative (Invitrogen) cells by fluorescence-activated cell sorter (FACS) after 48 hours of culture with different stimuli. The analysis was performed on an LSRII (BD Biosciences). DC differentiation pDC maturation was analyzed after 48 hours of stimulation measuring the expression of costimulatory molecules and human leukocyte antigen (HLA)-DR levels by FACS. We used the following antibodies: PECy7-CD80 (BioLegend), PECy5CD86 (eBioscience), PE-ICOS-ligand (eBioscience), and Alexa700-HLA-DR (BioLegend). Isotype-matched antibodies were used as control and values of mean fluorescent intensity (MFI) of each costimulatory molecule are expressed after subtraction of nonspecific isotype fluorescence values (Specific MFI). The analysis was performed on an LSRII (BD Biosciences). Pictures of pDC in culture were taken with a Leika microscope DMI6000 B just before FACS analysis. Blocking experiments Recombinant GM-CSF (R&D Systems) and TNF (Miltenyi) were used at 1 ng/mL. Tumor cell line supernatants and primary OF2 Cancer Res; 75(14) July 15, 2015 breast tumor supernatants were diluted 1/10 before for pDC stimulation. Exogenous cytokines, cell line supernatants, and primary breast tumor supernatants were preincubated 300 at 37 C with neutralizing monoclonal antibodies against GM-CSF and TNF (both R&D Systems) or isotype-matched control antibody (R&D Systems) at the concentration of 1 mg/mL before adding them to pDC in culture. pDC viability and maturation were measured after 48 hours of culture. Primary breast tumor and juxtatumor supernatants Breast tumor and juxtatumor tissues were cut in pieces of 40 mg. Each piece of tissue was put in one well of a 48-well plate in 250 mL of complete RPMI GlutaMAX (Gibco) containing 10% FBS (HyClone) without any stimulation. Supernatants were harvested after 24 hours of culture and tissues were discarded. Supernatants were diluted 1/2 with complete RPMI GlutaMAX (Gibco) containing 10% FBS (HyClone), filtered with a 0.22 mm filter (Millipore), aliquoted at 80 C, and then used to quantify cytokines and to stimulate pDC in culture. Cytokine quantification IL3, IL6, and IFNg were measured by Cytometric Bead Array Flex Set (BD Biosciences). The detection limit was 40 pg/mL. GM-CSF, TNF, IL22, TGFb (all from R&D Systems) and IFNa (PBL Biomedical Laboratories) were measured by ELISA. The detection limit for GM-CSF, TNF, IL22, and TGFb was 30 pg/mL. The detection limit for IFNa was 15 pg/mL. IHC Consecutive paraffin-embedded breast tumor sections 5 mm think were stained with a rabbit anti-human GM-CSF antibody (Abcam) and an isotype control Ab (Dako), followed by EnVision Detection Systems Peroxidase/DAB (Dako) or GMCSF antibody and BDCA2 antibody (Dendritics). Bronchoalveolar adenocarcinoma tissue was kindly provided by Dr. Aurelie Fabre (Centre for Biological Resources, Bichat-Claude Bernard Hospital, Paris, France) and it was used as a positive control for GM-CSF staining. The staining was performed using the Autostainer 480 (Labvision). Hematoxylin staining was used to visualize cell nuclei. Quantification and characterization of immune infiltrating cells in primary breast cancer Primary breast tumor and juxtatumor tissues were obtained from the same patient. Both tissues were carefully minced into small pieces in CO2 independent medium (Gibco) containing 5% FBS (HyClone). They were digested with collagenase (1 mg/mL; Roche) and DNAse (25 mg/mL; Roche) for 1 hour at 37 C under agitation at 180 rpm. Cell suspension was then filtered through a 40-mm nylon cell strainer (Falcon BD) and washed twice in cold PBS containing 5% of human serum (Biowest) and EDTA 2 mmol/L (Gibco). Cells were stained with the following antibodies: APCCy7-CD45 (BD Biosciences), FITC-CD3, FITC-CD14 (both Miltenyi), FITC-CD16, FITC-CD19 (both BD Biosciences), APC-CD4 (Miltenyi), PECy5-CD11c (BD Biosciences), PE-Cy7-CD123 (eBioscience), Alexa 700-HLA-DR (BioLegend), PE-GM-CSF-Ra (BD Biosciences), and PE-TNFRII (R&D Systems). Isotype-matched antibodies were used as control. DAPI (Invitrogen) was used to discriminate live and dead cells. Cancer Research Downloaded from cancerres.aacrjournals.org on June 16, 2017. © 2015 American Association for Cancer Research. Published OnlineFirst May 14, 2015; DOI: 10.1158/0008-5472.CAN-14-2386 GM-CSF Activates pDC for Th2 Priming in Aggressive Breast Cancer CD4 T helper differentiation CD4 T cells were enriched by magnetic negative selection (Miltenyi). CD4 na€ve T cells were then sorted as CD4þCD45RAþCD25CD45RO by flow cytometry. Purity was higher than 98%. pDC were cultured for 6 days with allogeneic na€ve CD4 T cells at a 1:5 ratio as previously described (12) in Yssel's medium (a kind gift from Dr. Hans Yssel, Montpellier, France) with 10% of FBS (HyClone). CD4 T cells were then restimulated with anti-CD3/CD28 microbeads (Dynal) in serum-free X-VIVO 15 medium (Lonza) at the density of 106 cells/mL. Cytokines were measured as described above in supernatants collected after 24 hours of restimulation. In parallel, CD4 T cells were lysed to extract RNA with RNAeasy micro kit (Qiagen). mRNA transcripts of transcription factors (TBX21, GATA3, and FOXP3) were quantified by real-time PCR on an ABI Prism 7900 sequence detector (Applied Biosystems) with Applied Biosystem predesigned TaqMan Gene Expression Assays and Absolute QPCR ROX mix (Thermo Fisher Scientific). CD3/CD28 stimulation of breast cancer-infiltrating T cells Primary breast tumor tissues were digested as described above. After digestion the cells were resuspended at the density of 106 cells/mL and cultured in 96 round bottom well plate in complete RPMI GlutaMAX (Gibco) containing 10% FBS (HyClone). Cells were stimulated with anti-CD3/CD28 microbeads (Dynal) at 1:1 ratio. Cytokines were measured as described above in supernatants collected after 24 hours of culture. Statistical analysis Comparisons between different conditions in experiments performed on pDC, as well as comparison between tumor and juxtatumor samples were performed using the Wilcoxon test (nonparametric paired test). Correlations were evaluated using the Spearman test (nonparametric test). For statistical analysis in Supplementary Fig. S9, the comparison between aggressive and nonaggressive tumors with high levels of pDC and/or GM-CSF and/or TNF was calculated using a c2 test. Statistical significance was retained for P values lower than 0.05 for all statistical test applied. , P < 0.05; , P < 0.005; , P < 0.001. Results Breast and colon cancer cell lines produce GM-CSF, IL6, and TNF We focused our study on cytokines that may be secreted by tumor cells and play an important role in shaping tumor inflammation (2, 6, 13). On the basis of a previous study of cytokine receptor expression (14), we measured cytokines with potential effects on human pDC (Supplementary Table S1). All cancer cell lines we tested were pathogen- and mycoplasma free, excluding the presence of exogenous (non-self) activating signals. GM-CSF, which was previously shown to activate pDC (14), was detected at high levels in 1 breast cancer cell line supernatant (MDAMB-231) out of six, and in 1 colon cancer cell line supernatant (LS1034) out of 2, with concentrations of 100 and 20 ng/mL, respectively. We detected lower amounts of GM-CSF (0.7 ng/mL) in the prostate cancer cell line PC3 (Supplementary Table S1). Doseresponse curves of pDC activated with recombinant GM-CSF showed a maximum level of CD80 and CD86 expression when pDC were treated with 1 ng/mL of recombinant cytokine. The plateau of activation was maintained until 100 ng/mL (Supple- www.aacrjournals.org mentary Fig. S1), suggesting that the levels of GM-CSF measured in MDA-MB-231 and LS1034 supernatants fall in the range that induces pDC activation in culture. IL6 was detected at various levels in cancer cell line supernatants: in 3 out of 6 for breast cancer (BT-20, BT-474 and MDAMB-231), in 2 out of 2 for colon cancer (HT-29 and LS1034), in 2 out of 3 for ovarian cancer (IGROV-1 and SKOV-3), and in the bladder carcinoma cell line ECV-304 (Supplementary Table S1). TNF was detected in the colon cancer cell line LS1034 supernatant and in 1 ovarian cancer cell line supernatant out of 3 (IGROV-1; Supplementary Table S1). IL3, IFNg, and IFNa, all three cytokines having been previously shown to activate pDC (11–15), were undetectable in all these tumor cell line supernatants (Supplementary Table S1). Breast and colon cancer cell lines promote pDC survival and maturation To identify tumor-derived secreted molecules that could function as activating signals for pDC, we systematically assessed the potential of various tumor cell line supernatants to activate human pDC. Culture supernatants of breast, colon, ovary, lung, bladder, bone, pancreas, and prostate cancer cell lines were added to primary pDC cultures for 48 hours (Fig. 1). pDC viability was assessed by flow cytometry as percentage of DAPI cells. Supernatants of the breast cancer cell line MDAMB-231, and the colon cancer cell line LS1034 increased the viability of pDC by a mean factor of 4.3 and 4.1 respectively, similar to exogenous cytokines IL3 and GM-CSF used as controls (Fig. 1A; refs. 14, 15). In addition, MDA-MB-231 and LS1034 supernatants upregulated the costimulatory molecules CD80 (Fig. 1B), ICOS-ligand (ICOSL), and CD86 (Supplementary Fig. S2) reflecting pDC activation. Consistently with increased survival, MDA-MB-231 but not MCF7 supernatants, led to cluster formation in pDC cultures (Fig. 1C). Thus, breast and colon cancer cell line supernatants promote pDC viability and maturation, suggesting that they contain soluble factors able to activate pDC. MDA-MB-231 breast tumor cell line activates pDC through GM-CSF The activation of pDC with MDA-MB-231–conditioned medium (Fig. 1) and the concomitant absence of detectable amounts of IFNa in pDC supernatants (Supplementary Fig. S3) strongly suggested a TLR-independent activation of pDC by breast cancer cell line supernatants. IL6 alone is not sufficient to maintain pDC viability and to activate them in culture (14). However, it may participate in pDC activation in combination with other tumor-derived factors present in the supernatants. We did not observe any significant differences neither in survival (Supplementary Fig. S4A) nor in CD80 and ICOSL expression (Supplementary Fig. S4B) when pDC were stimulated with a combination of GM-CSF and TNF, in the presence or absence of IL6. This led us to conclude that even if IL6 is present in tumor cell line supernatants, pDC do not have the ability to respond to it. Even if MDA-MB-231 supernatants did not contain measurable levels of TNF (Supplementary Table S1), an autocrine effect of this cytokine could not be excluded. Autocrine TNF was shown to induce pDC maturation when it is combined to a survival signal (11), which could contribute to pDC activation in our system, together with GM-CSF. To evaluate the implication of Cancer Res; 75(14) July 15, 2015 Downloaded from cancerres.aacrjournals.org on June 16, 2017. © 2015 American Association for Cancer Research. OF3 Published OnlineFirst May 14, 2015; DOI: 10.1158/0008-5472.CAN-14-2386 Ghirelli et al. A % of DAPI- pDC 100 *** *** Viability C GM-CSF Medium 80 60 40 100x 20 MCF7 sup. 100x MDA-MB-231 sup. 0 4 9 4 0 4 1 7 -3 D 9 3 -1 m 3 F -3 -1 3 - 3 iu IL -CS T-2 -47 -23 CF BR T47 T-2 103 OV HIN OV A54 -30 G-6 NC PC V M B BT MB M KH LS A R S SK M C P M G S E IG DA M ed 100x B CD80-specific MFI 2,000 *** * 100x CD80 1,500 1,000 500 0 4 9 9 4 0 4 1 7 -3 D 3 F -1 -3 -1 3 -3 m 3 iu IL -CS T-2 -47 -23 CF BR T47 T-2 103 OV HIN OV A54 -30 G-6 NC PC V M H LS B BT B M KS K A R M C S P M -M G S E IG DA M ed Figure 1. Breast and colon cancer cell line supernatants promote pDC viability and maturation. pDC were stimulated for 48 hours with supernatants generated from cell lines derived from different organs. A, pDC were put in culture without stimulation (Medium), with recombinant IL3 and GM-CSF as positive controls and with 16 different cell line supernatants previously diluted 1/10. pDC viability was assessed by FACS and it is expressed as percentage of DAPI cells. Data are the mean of six or more independent experiments, each from different donors. B, pDC maturation was assessed in the same experimental settings as A. The specific MFI of CD80 is overall viable pDC. Data are the mean of six or more independent experiments, each from different donors. Error bars represent SEM. C, pDC formed cluster in culture when stimulated with recombinant GM-CSF and MDA-MB-231 supernatant. pDC did not aggregate after stimulation with MCF-7 supernatants as in the untreated condition (Medium). Inset values represent the magnification. Pictures are representative of ten independent experiments. , P < 0.05; , P < 0.001. MDA-MB-231–derived GM-CSF and potential autocrine TNF, we blocked with specific monoclonal antibodies the effect of GMCSF (a-GM-CSF) and/or TNF (a-TNF). Blocking GM-CSF alone decreased ICOSL and CD80 upregulation induced by MDA-MB231 supernatants (Fig. 2A and B). Blocking TNF alone also decreased ICOSL and CD80 upregulation, showing a stronger effect on ICOSL inhibition (Fig. 2A). This suggested that TNF has a partial autocrine effect on pDC maturation after stimulation with MDA-MB-231 supernatants. However, the concomitant blocking of GM-CSF and TNF did not show additive effects. Overall, our results show that the breast cancer cell line MDA-MB-231 activates pDC through GM-CSF. GM-CSF, TNF, and IL6 are produced in the human primary breast cancer microenvironment Our previous results suggested that tumor cells have the capacity to produce GM-CSF, which may act in turn as an endogenous signal to activate pDC. To establish this in primary tumors, we OF4 Cancer Res; 75(14) July 15, 2015 studied primary human breast cancer samples. Primary breast tumor and juxtatumor samples were collected prospectively, and validated as tumoral and normal breast tissue, respectively, after pathologic examination. Supplementary Table S2 summarizes the clinical characteristics of the patients included in this study. Secreted tumor- and juxtatumor-derived cytokines were assessed after 24 hours of culture of unstimulated tumor and juxtatumor tissue pieces. As compared with juxtatumor samples, tumors produced significantly higher levels of GM-CSF (tumor median: 0.04 ng/mL; juxtatumor median: 0), TNF (tumor median: 0; juxtatumor median: 0), and IL6 (tumor median: 13.96 ng/mL; juxtatumor median: 5.82 ng/mL; Fig. 3A and Supplementary Table S3). The majority (58.6%) of tumor samples were positive for GM-CSF, and 27.3% were positive for TNF, as compared with 17.8% and 12.8%, respectively, for juxtatumor supernatants (Fig. 3 and Supplementary Table S3). All tumor and juxtatumor supernatants processed were positive for IL6 (Fig. 3 and Supplementary Table S3). Among other cytokines measured, Cancer Research Downloaded from cancerres.aacrjournals.org on June 16, 2017. © 2015 American Association for Cancer Research. Published OnlineFirst May 14, 2015; DOI: 10.1158/0008-5472.CAN-14-2386 GM-CSF Activates pDC for Th2 Priming in Aggressive Breast Cancer A B ICOSL CD80 115 1546 Medium 1x105 6580 100 100 80 1000 <PE-A> 10000 1x105 3853 100 60 40 1000 <PE-A> 10000 1x105 4296 60 40 100 1000 <PE-A> 10000 1x105 0 3024 40 100 1000 <PE-A> 10000 1x105 0 100 1000 <PE-A> 10000 1x105 0 ** ** 100 1000 <PE-A> 10000 1x105 + - + - 1000 10000 <PE-Cy7-A> 1x105 ** + + + GM-CSF + TNF + - 0 100 1000 10000 <PE-Cy7-A> 1x105 + + + MDA-MB-231 sup. 100 1000 10000 <PE-Cy7-A> 1x105 1000 10000 <PE-Cy7-A> 1x105 767 % of Max 80 60 40 20 0 0 100 1x105 1000 10000 <PE-Cy7-A> 0 100 ** * *** *** 1,500 + - 0 100 ** ** 4,000 0 100 ** *** 8,000 Isotype a-GM-CSF a-TNF 0 CD80-specific MFI 12,000 % of Max 0 0 533 60 0 0 0 60 40 20 0 1x105 1000 10000 <PE-Cy7-A> 80 20 0 1x105 875 100 100 20 20 20 0 40 0 10000 100 1x105 40 20 40 0 1000 10000 <PE-Cy7-A> 80 60 60 40 100 673 80 20 0 40 0 1000 <PE-A> 1079 898 100 80 60 0 1x105 MDA-MB-231 sup. 60 20 100 1000 10000 <PE-Cy7-A> 80 80 60 100 100 20 0 ICOSL-specific MFI 100 100 20 0 0 80 % of Max % of Max MDA-MB-231 sup. 100 452 60 40 20 0 0 80 40 20 0 0 100 80 60 α-GM-CSF + α-TNF α-TNF % of Max 10000 α-GM-CSF % of Max 100 1000 <PE-A> GM-CSF + TNF Isotype 1144 % of Max 100 60 40 20 0 0 80 40 20 0 80 % of Max % of Max 60 40 20 100 80 60 40 100 % of Max % of Max % of Max 60 % of Max 100 80 80 GM-CSF + TNF α-GM-CSF 5974 % of Max 100 % of Max Isotype 9573 100 α-GM-CSF + α-TNF α-TNF 4135 1882 % of Max Medium *** 1,000 500 0 Isotype a-GM-CSF a-TNF - + - + - + + + GM-CSF + TNF + - + - + + + MDA-MB-231 sup. Figure 2. MDA-MB-231 supernatants activate pDC through GM-CSF. pDC were cultured with recombinant GM-CSF and TNF and with MDA-MB-231 supernatants previously diluted 1/10. All stimuli were incubated with blocking antibodies against GM-CSF (a-GM-CSF) and TNF (a-TNF) either alone or in combination 30 minutes before adding pDC to the culture. Isotype-matched antibody was used as control. pDC maturation was assessed by FACS after 48 hours of culture. Gray histograms represent isotype control. Black histograms represent specific staining for ICOSL (A) and CD80 (B). Data are from one representative donor out of 8. Inset values indicate specific MFI on over all viable pDC. Unstimulated pDC (Medium) were used as negative control. Black histograms represent the quantification of the specific MFI of ICOSL (A) and CD80 (B). Data are the mean of eight independent experiments each from different donors. Error bars represent SEM. , P < 0.05; , P < 0.005; , P < 0.001. IL3 and IFNg were detected only in a few samples with no significant differences between tumor and juxtatumor supernatants, whereas IFNa was undetectable in all samples (Fig. 3 and Supplementary Table S3). This cytokine pattern paralleled the profile observed in the two cancer cell line supernatants (Supplementary Table S1) that activated pDC in culture (Fig. 1), characterized mainly by high GM-CSF and IL6. the 58.6% of tumor samples found positive for GM-CSF after ex vivo culture. Figure 3B shows an example of a high and moderate GM-CSF staining, respectively (Fig. 3B, bottom right) in comparison with the isotype control antibody (Fig. 3B, bottom left). Pathologic examination of these sections indicated that the major source of GM-CSF was the breast tumor epithelial cells. Primary breast tumor cells produce GM-CSF in situ On the basis of the study of cancer cell lines and primary tumorconditioned supernatants, we identified GM-CSF as a main candidate cytokine for pDC activation. To exclude artefacts due to the culture of tumor pieces that may trigger the release of GM-CSF, we decided to confirm its presence in situ by IHC (Fig. 3B). This was also a way to further precise its cellular source. We used bronchoalveolar carcinoma as a positive control for the presence of GMCSF (Fig. 3B; refs. 16, 18). We stained breast cancer tissues from twenty different patient samples. GM-CSF positivity was assessed in comparison with an isotype-matched antibody used as control (Fig. 3B, left). Our results show that two tumors out of 20 (10%) were highly positive for GM-CSF, 11 (55%) displayed a moderate staining, and 7 (35%) were negative. In total, we found over 60% of breast tumor tissue positive for GM-CSF. This result paralleled pDC infiltrate human breast cancer Cellularity was analyzed by flow cytometry following tissue digestion. Gating strategy is shown in Supplementary Fig. S5. Among viable cells, tumor tissue contained significantly higher proportion of CD45þ leukocytes (median: 27.7% of DAPI cells), pDC quantified as DAPICD45þLinCD123þHLA-DRþ (median: 0.1% of DAPI cells), and DC quantified as DAPICD45þLinCD123dimHLA-DRþCD11cþ (median: 0.2% of DAPI cells), as compared with juxtatumor samples from the same patient (CD45þ median: 4.7%; pDC median: 0.005%; DC median: 0,017%; Fig. 3C). Normalization of pDC and DC to the CD45þ fraction gave similar results (Supplementary Fig. S6). To quantify pDC and DC using flow cytometry, we acquired at least 100,000 viable cells and we used a cutoff of 0.1% of CD45þ cells to define positivity, which was significantly higher than the background isotype control. On the basis of these criteria, 93 breast www.aacrjournals.org Cancer Res; 75(14) July 15, 2015 Downloaded from cancerres.aacrjournals.org on June 16, 2017. © 2015 American Association for Cancer Research. OF5 Published OnlineFirst May 14, 2015; DOI: 10.1158/0008-5472.CAN-14-2386 Ghirelli et al. A TNF IL6 (N = 111) (N = 117) (N = 94) *** 0.8 ng/mL GM-CSF ** 0.8 0.5 0.4 0.5 0.4 0.2 0.2 0 0.0 0 0.0 B Bronchoalveolar carcinoma *** 110 Isotype GM-CSF 80 75 50 25 Tum Juxta Tum IFNα (N = 100) (N = 95) (N = 96) 0.2 0.1 0.06 0.1 Tum C 0 0.00 Juxta 0.0 0 Juxta Tum pDC DC (N = 118) (N = 118) *** % pDC/DAPI- 15.0 50 25 *** 3.5 0.7 0.6 0.3 0 0.0 Juxta GM-CSF Juxta CD45+ 75 Tum Isotype (N = 118) *** 100 Tum Breast cancer ns % DC/DAPI- ng/mL ns 0.12 0 Juxta IFNγ 0.2 0 0.0 Tum IL3 ns % CD45+/DAPI- 0 Juxta 3.0 2 1 0 Tum Juxta Tum Juxta Figure 3. Primary breast tumor microenvironment shows increased GM-CSF production and increased pDC percentages as compared with juxtatumor tissue. A, GM-CSF, TNF, IL6, IL3, IFNg, and IFNa were measured in primary tumor and juxtatumor supernatants. Each dot represents the measurement performed for a tumor tissue (Tum) paired with its respective juxtatumor tissue (Juxta). N, the numbers of paired measurements performed for each cytokine. Bars represent median. B, breast cancer tissues were stained with a rabbit anti-GM-CSF antibody (right). An isotype antibody was used as control (left). Bronchoalveolar adenocarcinoma (top) was used as positive control tissue to validate GM-CSF staining. Middle panels represent an example of a highly positive lobular carcinoma and bottom panels represent an example of a moderate positive ductal carcinoma. Bars represent a length of 100 mm. Pictures were taken with a CFW-1308C color digital camera (Scion Corporation) on a Leica DM 4000 B microscope. C, immune cells were quantified þ þ þ by FACS after tumor and juxtatumor tissue digestion. pDC were quantified as DAPI CD45 Lin CD123 HLA-DR . DCs were quantified as DAPI þ dim þ þ CD45 Lin CD123 HLA-DR CD11c . Each dot represents the measurement performed for a tumor tissue (Tum) paired with its respective juxtatumor tissue (Juxta). N, the numbers of paired measurements performed for each cell population. Bars represent median. , P < 0.005; , P < 0.001. tumor samples (78.8%) were positive for pDC infiltration, and 103 (87.3%) for DC infiltration, as compared with 48 (40.7%) and 84 (71.2%) positive juxtatumor tissues for pDC and DC, respectively. Tumor-infiltrating pDC express GM-CSF-Ra (CD116) but not TNF-RII To evaluate the ability of tumor-infiltrating pDC to respond to GM-CSF and TNF, which are the two main cytokines measured in primary breast tumor supernatants with an activating potential on pDC, we measured the expression of GM-CSF receptor (CD116) and TNF receptor (TNF-RII) by flow cytometry in tumor-infiltrating pDC using the gate strategy showed in Supplementary Fig. S5. As for blood pDC (Fig. 4, right) tumor pDC expressed high levels of CD116 (Fig. 4, left), while lower levels were detected on juxtatumor pDC (Fig. 4, middle). On the contrary, tumor pDC did not express TNF-RII, similar to blood pDC, while juxtatumor pDC showed a small increase in the specific staining for this OF6 Cancer Res; 75(14) July 15, 2015 receptor (Fig. 4, left, right, and middle, respectively). These data indicate that the expression of GM-CSF receptor is not affected by the tumor microenvironment, and that tumor pDC have the ability to respond to tumor-derived GM-CSF. Tumor-derived GM-CSF promotes pDC viability and maturation To address the function of primary tumor-derived GM-CSF, we analyzed the effect of tumor supernatants containing a broad range of GM-CSF concentrations, on the viability and maturation of pDC purified from the blood of healthy donors. We observed a significant positive correlation between GM-CSF levels in tumor supernatants, and the viability of pDC after 48 hours of culture (Fig. 4B, top). This was not the case for TNF (Fig. 4B, bottom), which, together with the lack of TNF receptor on tumor pDC (Fig. 4A, left), suggested that GM-CSF rather than TNF might be involved in modulating pDC viability and function in the primary tumor Cancer Research Downloaded from cancerres.aacrjournals.org on June 16, 2017. © 2015 American Association for Cancer Research. Published OnlineFirst May 14, 2015; DOI: 10.1158/0008-5472.CAN-14-2386 GM-CSF Activates pDC for Th2 Priming in Aggressive Breast Cancer Juxtatumor pDC Tumor pDC GM-CSF-Ra B GM-CSF-Ra TNF-R II 4821 0 Tum sup. GM-CSF (ng/mL; 1/10 dilution) Spearman P = 0.0004 *** 0.2 0.1 0.0 0 20 40 60 GM-CSF-Ra 260 80 100 0.3 Spearman P < 0.0001 *** 0.2 0.1 0.0 0 0.0 20 40 60 80 100 % of viable pDC Tum sup. TNF (ng/mL; 1/10 dilution) Tum sup. TNF (ng/mL; 1/10 dilution) 0.1 0 500 1,000 1,500 2,000 2,500 CD80-specific MFI Spearman P = 0.0262 ns 0.3 0.2 0 CD80 % of viable pDC 0.8 TNF-R II 3456 C Viability 0.3 Blood pDC TNF-R II 4109 Tum sup. GM-CSF (ng/mL; 1/10 dilution) A 0.4 Spearman P = 0.9952 ns 0.3 0.2 0.1 0.0 0 2,000 4,000 6,000 CD80-specific MFI Figure 4. Breast tumor-derived GM-CSF promotes pDC survival and CD80 expression. A, primary tumor and juxtatumor tissues were digested and the levels of GM-CSF-Ra and TNFRII expression on pDC were quantified by FACS. Tumor, juxtatumor, and blood pDC were identified using the gate strategy shown in Supplementary Fig. S5. Gray histograms represent unstained cells. Black histograms represent specific staining for the receptors. Inset values indicate specific MFI on over all viable pDC. Data are from one representative breast tumor and juxtatumor tissue out of 5. B, correlation between the percentage of viable pDC and the amounts of GM-CSF and TNF obtained after 1/10 dilution of tumor supernatants before pDC stimulation in culture. C, correlation between CD80-specific MFI and amounts of GM-CSF and TNF obtained after 1/10 dilution of tumor supernatants before pDC stimulation in culture. Each dot represents an independent experiment performed on pDC stimulated with a different tumor supernatant. ns, nonsignificant. microenvironment. Tumor-derived GM-CSF was able to upregulate costimulatory molecules on purified primary pDC. We analyzed pDC maturation in the same experimental settings as Fig. 4B. As for pDC viability (Fig. 6B), we observed a significant positive correlation between GM-CSF concentration and pDC maturation based on the measurement of surface CD80 expression after 48 hours of culture (Fig. 4C, top). CD80 expression on pDC did not correlate with TNF concentration (Fig. 4C, bottom), suggesting that pDC maturation with tumor supernatant, as well as pDC viability, are driven by GM-CSF, and not TNF. To directly assess and quantify the ability of tumor-derived GM-CSF to promote pDC viability, we cultured purified primary healthy pDC with tumor supernatant in the absence or presence of a blocking antibody against GM-CSF (aGM-CSF; Fig. 5). Tumor supernatants were able to maintain pDC viability to levels similar to culture medium alone (Fig. 5A). Blocking GM-CSF induced an important and statistically significant drop in pDC viability of about 50% (Fig. 5A). Thus, the secreted tumor microenvironment is able to maintain pDC viability through GM-CSF. Breast tumor supernatants were able to upregulate not only CD80 (Figs. 4C and 5B), but also CD86 and ICOSL expression www.aacrjournals.org on pDC compared with unstimulated pDC (Fig. 5B). Blocking GMCSF in the context of tumor supernatants decreased CD80 and ICOSL upregulation by 62% and 37%, respectively, although not affecting CD86 expression (Fig. 5B). Breast cancer-derived GM-CSF converts pDC into mature dendritic cells that are able to stimulate na€ve CD4 T cells It was previously shown that pDC did not stimulate na€ve CD4 T cells unless properly activated (10). The activated phenotype of pDC stimulated with breast tumor and juxtatumor supernatants was associated with a lack of detectable amounts of IFNa in pDC supernatants (Supplementary Fig. S7), as was observed in other systems of cytokine-induced pDC activation (10). This further supported a TLR-independent pDC activation in the context of the breast cancer microenvironment. Next, we asked whether pDC matured by the breast tumor supernatant were able to induce the expansion of allogeneic primary na€ve CD4 T cells. To do so, we selected a panel of GM-CSF–positive breast tumor supernatants to stimulate pDC. We found that pDC activated with these breast tumor supernatants Cancer Res; 75(14) July 15, 2015 Downloaded from cancerres.aacrjournals.org on June 16, 2017. © 2015 American Association for Cancer Research. OF7 Published OnlineFirst May 14, 2015; DOI: 10.1158/0008-5472.CAN-14-2386 Ghirelli et al. A Viability ns ** % of DAPI- pDC 100 80 60 40 20 0 Tum sup Isotype a-GM-CSF - + + - B + + CD80 *** Specific M FI 10,000 ICOSL ** *** 25,000 CD86 * 4,500 4,000 3,500 3,000 ns *** 20,000 7,000 4,000 3,000 2,000 2,000 1,000 0 Tum sup Isotype a-GM-CSF 0 0 - + + - + + - + + - + + - + + - + + Figure 5. Breast tumors promote pDC viability and maturation through GM-CSF. A, viability of pDC after 48 hours of stimulation with tumor supernatants (Tum sup). Tumor supernatants were diluted 1/10 and they were incubated with blocking antibodies against GM-CSF (a-GM-CSF) 30 minutes before adding pDC to the culture. Isotype-matched control was used. pDC viability was measured by FACS and it is expressed as percentage of DAPI . Each dot represents an independent experiment performed on pDC stimulated with a different tumor supernatant. Bars represent median. B, pDC maturation was assessed by FACS in the same experimental settings as A. The specific MFI of CD80, ICOSL, and CD86 is expressed on overall viable pDC. Each dot represents an independent experiment performed on pDC stimulated with a different tumor supernatant. Bars represent median. , P < 0.05; , P < 0.005; , P < 0.001. ns, nonsignificant. induced the highest CD4 T-cell expansion, as compared with medium alone and exogenous GM-CSF (Fig. 6A). In this system, we could not block endogenous GM-CSF to address its involvement in T-cell priming because of the strong decrease in pDC viability (Fig. 5A), leading to insufficient pDC numbers to perform T-cell coculture assay. However, we could correlate the concentration of tumor-derived GM-CSF with the ability of each supernatant to promote pDC-mediated CD4 T-cell expansion. This revealed a strong and significant positive correlation between GM-CSF levels and T-cell expansion (Fig. 6B). Thus, breast cancer-derived GM-CSF confers pDC a na€ve CD4 T-cell stimulatory capacity. pDC primed with GM-CSF containing tumor supernatants induce effector CD4 T cells with a regulatory Th2-biased cytokine profile To evaluate the effector functions of CD4 T cells primed with tumor-activated pDC, we measured an extended panel of T-cell–derived cytokines. When compared with medium-pDC, T cells activated with GM-CSF–positive tumor-pDC produced higher amounts of IL4, IL5, IL10, IL13, and TNF, but lower OF8 Cancer Res; 75(14) July 15, 2015 amounts of IFNg (Fig. 6C). This higher IL4, IL5, and IL13, combined to lower IFNg production, together with lower expression of TBX21 (Tbet; Supplementary Fig. S8A, left) indicated a global Th2 bias. The transcription factor GATA3 was less expressed in CD4 T cells activated with tumor-primed pDC as compared with medium-pDC and GM-CSF-pDC (Supplementary Fig. S8A, middle), suggesting that the Th2 bias observed might be GATA3 independent. We did not observe any differences in FOXP3 and TGFb expression (Supplementary Fig. S8A, right and Supplementary Fig. S8B, left) by CD4 T cells primed with differentially activated pDC. Interestingly, GM-CSF–positive tumor-pDC induced higher IL10 production by CD4 T cells, as compared with GM-CSF-pDC (Fig. 6C). This suggested that other factors within the secreted tumor microenvironment might act in synergy with tumorderived GM-CSF to further increase IL10 priming, and promote a regulatory Th2 phenotype (19). Of particular interest is the bi-modal distribution of IL5 (Fig. 6C). A group of GM-CSF–positive tumor supernatants primed pDC to activate CD4 T cells to secrete high amounts of Cancer Research Downloaded from cancerres.aacrjournals.org on June 16, 2017. © 2015 American Association for Cancer Research. Published OnlineFirst May 14, 2015; DOI: 10.1158/0008-5472.CAN-14-2386 GM-CSF Activates pDC for Th2 Priming in Aggressive Breast Cancer B ** *** 9 Spearman P = 0,0002 ** 6 3 0 Med Tum GM-CSF T-cell fold expansion T-cell fold expansion A *** 9 6 3 0 0.0 0.1 0.2 0.3 Tum GM-CSF (ng/mL;1/10 dilution) C 4 IL4 * ** IL5 ns ns ng/mL 3 * 12 4.5 4 8 2 4 8 0 D IL13 * ns ** 6 6 TNF ** ns ** Med Tum GM-CSF 0 0 ns * 0.6 Med Tum GM-CSF 0.2 0.3 0.1 0 *** 5 0.6 1 0.5 0.3 0.1 ns 8 * * 4 2 2 Med Tum GM-CSF IFNg 6 4 4 2 1 ng/mL 9.0 * IL10 ** ns ** Med Tum GM-CSF ** 0 8 2 Med Tum GM-CSF *** 0 6 5 4 3 2 2 1 Med Tum GM-CSF *** 0.1 0 0 Unst αCD3/28 0 Unst αCD3/28 0 Unst αCD3/28 Unst αCD3/28 0 Unst αCD3/28 0 Unst αCD3/28 Figure 6. GM-CSF–positive breast tumors convert pDC into mature DC, inducing a regulatory Th2-biased CD4 T-cell differentiation. pDC were cultured for 48 hours without stimulation (Med), with breast tumor supernatants containing different amounts of GM-CSF (Tum) and with recombinant GM-CSF. Matured pDC were then cocultured with allogeneic na€ve CD4 T cells. After 6 days of coculture, CD4 T cells were restimulated with anti-CD3/CD28 (aCD3/28) for 24 hours. A, CD4 T-cell fold expansion was calculated after 6 days of coculture. B, correlation between T-cell fold expansion and the amounts of GM-CSF obtained after 1/10 dilution of tumor supernatants before pDC stimulation. C, CD4 T-cell cytokines were measured 24 hours after aCD3/CD28 T-cell restimulation in the same experimental settings as A and B. For A, B, and C, each dot represents an independent experiment performed on pDC stimulated with a different tumor supernatant containing GM-CSF. Bars represent median. N ¼ 15. D, digested cells from breast tumor tissues were put in culture without stimulation (Unst) or with aCD3/28. Cytokines were measured in supernatants collected after 24 hours. Each dot represents the measurement performed on a different tumor sample. N ¼ 24. , P < 0.05; , P < 0.005; , P < 0.001. ns, nonsignificant. IL5 (1.45–8.75 ng/mL), whereas a second group did not. This may be due to other soluble factors present in the tumor microenvironment or to different costimulatory molecules expressed by pDC. We did not observe significant differences in IL22 production between CD4 T cells stimulated with tumor-pDC and mediumpDC or GM-CSF-pDC (Supplementary Fig. S8B, right). In summary, CD4 T cells primed by GM-CSF–positive tumoractivated pDC produced a large panel of T helper cytokines, suggesting efficient effector functions. This cytokine profile was qualitatively biased toward a regulatory Th2 phenotype, characterized by Th2 cytokines, and high levels of IL10. To assess the in vivo relevance of these results, we digested primary breast cancer tissues, and we stimulated the single cell suspension ex vivo in a polyclonal manner with a CD3/CD28 (aCD3/CD28) microbeads for 24 hours (Fig. 6D). The same panel of Th cytokines as for in vitro-primed CD4 T cells was www.aacrjournals.org measured in supernatants of restimulated tumor-infiltrating T cells. In unstimulated conditions, we never found detectable amounts of IL4, IL5, and IL13, and only in a minority of supernatants we detected low amounts of IL10, TNF, and IFNg (Fig. 6D and Supplementary Table S4). After anti-CD3/CD28 stimulation, we observed a significant increase in IL4, IL5, and IL13, respectively, in 30%, 12%, and 39% of supernatants (Fig. 6D and Supplementary Table S4); 91% of the samples were positive for TNF and IFNgafter aCD3/CD28 stimulation, and 83% of them showed IL10 production with levels up to 4.7 ng/mL (Fig. 6D and Supplementary Table S4). These results indicated a good match between the cytokine profile of in vitroprimed na€ve T cells with tumor-activated pDC, and ex vivo restimulated tumor-infiltrating T cells. This strengthens the in vivo relevance of the cytokine profile that we observed with allogeneic na€ve CD4 T cells cocultured with tumor-activated pDC (Fig. 6C). Cancer Res; 75(14) July 15, 2015 Downloaded from cancerres.aacrjournals.org on June 16, 2017. © 2015 American Association for Cancer Research. OF9 Published OnlineFirst May 14, 2015; DOI: 10.1158/0008-5472.CAN-14-2386 Ghirelli et al. P = 0.038 * 60 40 20 0 Aggr. P = 0.13 80 ns 60 40 20 0 Non aggr. Aggr. Non aggr. % of tumors with high pDC and high GM-CSF % of tumors with high pDC 80 % of tumors with high GM-CSF A nal B). Nonaggressive group includes luminal A breast cancer types, which are hormone receptor–positive and HER2-negative. By performing a c2 test, we showed that the group of aggressive breast cancer (20) was enriched in high pDC compared with nonaggressive tumors (P ¼ 0.038; Fig. 7A, top left). This significance was stronger if the comparison between aggressive and nonaggressive breast cancer was calculated taking into account samples showing concomitant high levels of pDC and GM-CSF (P ¼ 0.0012), which were 30.8% and 6.5%, respectively (Fig. 7A, top right), and it was lost when the same analysis was performed taking in account only GM-CSF high tumors (Fig. 7A, top middle). High levels of TNF, either alone or in combination with high pDC levels, were not associated to breast cancer aggressiveness (Fig. 7A, bottom). Figure 7B shows an example of an aggressive breast cancer (triple-negative) stained for GM-CSF and pDC in two consecutive slides. Dashed lines delimitate the tumor area positive for GM-CSF, and the black arrows show the localization of a pDC cluster next to a GM-CSF–positive area. P = 0.5 80 60 40 20 0 B GM-CSF % of tumors with % of tumors with high TNF ns Aggr. pDC Non aggr. high pDC and high TNF Concomitant high levels of pDC and GM-CSF are characteristic of aggressive breast cancer Because of the short time delay between the enrolment of the last patient in this study and the current time (less than 5 years), we decided to follow a new approach to assess the physiopathological implication of pDC and GM-CSF in breast cancer. Samples were stratified based on the distribution of pDC and GM-CSF amounts, or pDC and TNF amounts, as quantified by FACS and ELISA, respectively (Fig. 3C, middle and Fig. 3A, top left and middle). We defined tumors with high amounts of pDC respective to high levels of GM-CSF or TNF as the tumors for which the percentage of pDC respective to the level of GM-CSF or TNF were greater than the 66th percentile of the distribution across all tumors. After histopathological examination, tumors were classified in aggressive and nonaggressive groups. Aggressive tumors include hormone receptor/HER2-negative samples (triple-negative, TN), hormone receptor-negative and HER2-positive samples (HER2þ), and hormone receptor/HER2-positive samples (lumi- 80 P = 0.001 ** 60 Aggressive breast cancer TN, HER2+, LB (N = 26) Non-aggressive breast cancer LA (N = 92) 40 20 0 80 Aggr. Non aggr. P = 0.1 ns 60 40 20 0 Aggr. GM-CSF Non aggr. pDC Figure 7. High levels of pDC and GM-CSF are characteristic of aggressive breast cancer. A, bar graphs represent the percentage of tumors characterized by high pDC (top left), high GM-CSF (top middle), high pDC and high GM-CSF (top right), high TNF (bottom left), and high pDC and high TNF (bottom right). Black þ histograms represent triple-negative (TN), HER2 , and luminal B (LB) breast tumors; white histograms represent luminal A (LA) breast tumors. TN, hormone þ receptor and HER2-negative tumors; HER2 , hormone receptor–negative and HER2-positive tumors; LB, hormone receptor and HER2-positive tumors; LA, hormone receptor–positive and HER2-negative tumors. This analysis was performed on the whole cohort of 118 breast cancer samples collected for this study. B, GMCSF and pDC (BDCA2-positive cells) staining in two consecutive sections of the same triple-negative breast cancer sample. Dashed lines show the tumor area where GM-CSF is produced and black arrows show the localization of pDC. Bars represent a length of 50 mm. Pictures were taken with a CFW-1308C color digital camera (Scion Corporation) on a Leica DM 4000 B microscope. ns, nonsignificant. OF10 Cancer Res; 75(14) July 15, 2015 Cancer Research Downloaded from cancerres.aacrjournals.org on June 16, 2017. © 2015 American Association for Cancer Research. Published OnlineFirst May 14, 2015; DOI: 10.1158/0008-5472.CAN-14-2386 GM-CSF Activates pDC for Th2 Priming in Aggressive Breast Cancer Overall these data indicate that high amounts of pDC and GMCSF were associated with the tumor subgroups of worst prognosis. This suggests a role for pDC and GM-CSF in the generation and maintenance of an immunoregulatory environment, which may favor a bad outcome for breast cancer patients. Discussion In this study, we investigated the role of pDC as players at the interface between innate and adaptive immunity and their behavior in shaping immune response after activation with breast tumor-derived soluble factors. pDC link innate and adaptive immunity, and produce type I IFN following activation through TLR-7 and -9 by microbes and microbial products, thus participating in the protection against infections (10, 21). However, pDC were also implicated in a variety of sterile inflammatory conditions (10, 22, 23), and infiltrate a broad range of solid tumors such as head and neck cancer (24), ovarian cancer (25), cervical carcinoma (26), lung cancer (27), thyroid cancer (28), breast cancer (29), and melanoma (30). Despite the increasing number of observations about pDC presence in solid tumors, the nature of the signals they receive within the tumor microenvironment is not known (221). This question is crucial because pDC harbor a great level of functional plasticity depending on the microenvironmental stimuli they receive (10). Our data now provide a physiopathological relevance to the GM-CSF pathway for pDC activation within the breast tumor microenvironment. As key sensors at the interface between innate and adaptive immunity, pDC can efficiently prime CD4 na€ve T cells in the lymph nodes (31), and induce Th1 or Th2 polarization depending on the signals present in their microenvironment (10, 32). In our study, the cytokine profile of na€ve CD4 T cells primed with GMCSF–positive breast tumor-activated pDC was characterized by higher production of IL4, IL5, IL13, IL10, and TNF, accompanied by a lower IFNg production, as compared with unstimulated pDC. This profile was different from that of CD4 T cells stimulated with GM-CSF-pDC, which was characterized by more IL13 and IFNg, and less IL5, as compared with tumor-pDC, suggesting that other tumor-derived factors than GM-CSF may act concomitantly to shape the ability of pDC to prime CD4 T cells. Production of TNF by CD4 T cells primed with tumor-activated pDC is puzzling given the differential regulation of IL10 and TNF described in vitro (19). Tumor T-cell–derived TNF has been shown to participate to tumor progression (8). CD4 T cells cocultured with tumor-primed pDC produced high levels of IL10, which was consistent with the high ICOSL expression on pDC stimulated with tumor supernatants. ICOSL is known to be required for pDC to prime CD4 T cells to produce IL10 (12). This cytokine profile was confirmed in independent experiments using tumor-infiltrating T cells following polyclonal restimulation. This provides a strong basis for the implication of a GM-CSF/pDC/Th2 axis in breast cancer. Th2 cytokines were shown to contribute to tumorigenesis in several models. IL13 produced by NKT cells induced myeloid cells to make TGFb, which inhibited CTL functions in several mouse models (33). A study performed on a spontaneous mouse breast cancer model underlined the role of Th2 cells in facilitating the development of lung metastasis through macrophage activation (34), supporting a previous work demonstrating the role of IL4 in mediating lung metastasis (35). On the other side a more recent work, showed that adaptive immune cells do not play any role in the development of a metastatic HER2þ breast cancer (36). Th2 www.aacrjournals.org and TGFb activation was associated with poor prognosis in human breast cancer (37). Overall, Th2 cells and Th2 cytokines have been related to induction of T-cell anergy and loss of T-cell– mediated cytotoxicity leading to a downregulation of cell-mediated antitumor immunity (13). Human breast cancer has also been associated to a type II inflammation (38) that was shown to be mediated by TSLP action on tumor-infiltrating dendritic cells. However, a large proportion of tumors (61.4%) was TSLP-negative, raising the question of alternative or parallel pathways to induce Th2 responses. Our results describe a novel pDC/GM-CSF/Th2 axis as a new mechanism to explain the development of a regulatory type II inflammation characteristic of human breast cancer. Further studies will be needed to evaluate the relative role of these pathways within the breast cancer microenvironment. pDC were suggested to have properties in driving immune tolerance to tumors. Tumor-infiltrating pDC drive CD4 and CD8 T cells to produce IL10 and acquire a regulatory phenotype in ovarian cancer (25, 39). pDC can induce regulatory T cells in vitro as well as in vivo in melanoma and breast cancer (40, 41) to help maintaining a tolerogenic microenvironment. pDC were identified as an adverse prognostic factor for breast cancer patient survival (29) as well as melanoma cancer patients (42), which suggest their regulatory rather than antitumor properties. A recent work has shown that pDC accumulate in aggressive breast tumors contributing to tumor immune tolerance and poor clinical outcome (41). GM-CSF can be produced by a large variety of cell types, such as fibroblasts, endothelial cells, T cells, macrophages, mesothelial cells, and epithelial cells (43). Previous studies have shown the presence of GM-CSF in diverse type of tumors, including breast cancer (17, 44–47). GM-CSF can function as an immune adjuvant by activating NK cells and myeloid cells (48), and is widely used in antitumor therapy (49, 50). However, GM-CSF is known to be able to suppress the immune response since decades (51, 52), and some clinical studies have shown that GM-CSF as anticancer vaccine adjuvant can have adverse outcome in term of relapsefree and overall survival (53, 54). It was recently shown that breast cancer-derived GM-CSF has a protumorigenic role, and a positive correlation between high levels of endogenous GM-CSF, increased metastasis, and reduced survival was observed in breast cancer patients (47). To the best of our knowledge, there are no studies available on the combined role of pDC and GM-CSF in breast cancer. Our data provide evidence for pDC as a novel cellular target of tumorderived GM-CSF. The clinical relevance of pDC and GM-CSF as coordinated immunoregulatory players within the breast cancer microenvironment is of high importance. We found that high levels of pDC and GM-CSF were characteristic of aggressive breast cancer reflecting their role in shaping the immune response toward a regulatory Th2 phenotype. In our current study, we had to pool various types of aggressive breast cancer (TN, HER2-positive, and luminal B) because of the relative low number patients in each of these subgroups. Future studies on larger aggressive breast cancer cohorts may be important to delineate the specific impact of the tumor/GM-CSF/pDC axis in their respective clinical outcome. Given the complexity of the tumor microenvironment, several factors probably act in combination to activate innate immunity. It will be important to continue dissecting the breast cancer microenvironment complexity, identify other endogenous factors Cancer Res; 75(14) July 15, 2015 Downloaded from cancerres.aacrjournals.org on June 16, 2017. © 2015 American Association for Cancer Research. OF11 Published OnlineFirst May 14, 2015; DOI: 10.1158/0008-5472.CAN-14-2386 Ghirelli et al. that can shape the immune response, and understand their mutual interactions. Additional clinical studies will be important to define whether breast cancer-derived GM-CSF, and its downstream functional impact on pDC, can serve as novel prognostic biomarkers or therapeutic targets to improve the clinical care of breast cancer patients. Administrative, technical, or material support (i.e., reporting or organizing data, constructing databases): M.-H. Donnadieu, M. Caly Study supervision: X. Sastre-Garau, V. Soumelis Acknowledgments The authors thank Zofia Maciorowski and Annick Viguier for the cytofluorimetric cell sorting, and Philippe Benaroch and Elisabetta Volpe for helpful suggestions and critical reading of the article. Disclosure of Potential Conflicts of Interest No potential conflicts of interest were disclosed. Authors' Contributions Conception and design: C. Ghirelli, C. Caux, V. Soumelis Development of methodology: C. Ghirelli, C. Caux Acquisition of data (provided animals, acquired and managed patients, provided facilities, etc.): C. Ghirelli, F. Reyal, R. Zollinger, P. Sirven, P. Michea, N. Bendriss-Vermare, V. Fourchotte, A. Vincent-Salomon, B. Sigal-Zafrani, X. Sastre-Garau, X. Sastre-Garau Analysis and interpretation of data (e.g., statistical analysis, biostatistics, computational analysis): C. Ghirelli, F. Reyal, M. Jeanmougin, R. Zollinger, P. Sirven, P. Michea Writing, review, and/or revision of the manuscript: C. Ghirelli, F. Reyal, M. Jeanmougin, C. Caux, N. Bendriss-Vermare, V. Soumelis Grant Support This work was supported by Leonardo da Vinci Unipharma Graduates Program (C. Ghirelli), Association pour la Recherche Contre le Cancer (C. Ghirelli), European Marie Curie Excellence Grant (R. Zollinger and V. Soumelis), Fondation pour la Recherche Medicale (R. Zollinger), and Curie Institute "PIC Tumor Microenvironment" funding (M. Jeanmougin, P. 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OF13 Published OnlineFirst May 14, 2015; DOI: 10.1158/0008-5472.CAN-14-2386 Breast Cancer Cell−Derived GM-CSF Licenses Regulatory Th2 Induction by Plasmacytoid Predendritic Cells in Aggressive Disease Subtypes Cristina Ghirelli, Fabien Reyal, Marine Jeanmougin, et al. Cancer Res Published OnlineFirst May 14, 2015. Updated version Supplementary Material E-mail alerts Reprints and Subscriptions Permissions Access the most recent version of this article at: doi:10.1158/0008-5472.CAN-14-2386 Access the most recent supplemental material at: http://cancerres.aacrjournals.org/content/suppl/2015/05/15/0008-5472.CAN-14-2386.DC1 Sign up to receive free email-alerts related to this article or journal. To order reprints of this article or to subscribe to the journal, contact the AACR Publications Department at [email protected]. To request permission to re-use all or part of this article, contact the AACR Publications Department at [email protected]. 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