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Publication : Lymphatic vessels regulate immune microenvironments in human and murine melanoma.

First Author  Lund AW Year  2016
Journal  J Clin Invest Volume  126
Issue  9 Pages  3389-402
PubMed ID  27525437 Mgi Jnum  J:237244
Mgi Id  MGI:5811734 Doi  10.1172/JCI79434
Citation  Lund AW, et al. (2016) Lymphatic vessels regulate immune microenvironments in human and murine melanoma. J Clin Invest 126(9):3389-402
abstractText  Lymphatic remodeling in tumor microenvironments correlates with progression and metastasis, and local lymphatic vessels play complex and poorly understood roles in tumor immunity. Tumor lymphangiogenesis is associated with increased immune suppression, yet lymphatic vessels are required for fluid drainage and immune cell trafficking to lymph nodes, where adaptive immune responses are mounted. Here, we examined the contribution of lymphatic drainage to tumor inflammation and immunity using a mouse model that lacks dermal lymphatic vessels (K14-VEGFR3-Ig mice). Melanomas implanted in these mice grew robustly, but exhibited drastically reduced cytokine expression and leukocyte infiltration compared with those implanted in control animals. In the absence of local immune suppression, transferred cytotoxic T cells more effectively controlled tumors in K14-VEGFR3-Ig mice than in control mice. Furthermore, gene expression analysis of human melanoma samples revealed that patient immune parameters are markedly stratified by levels of lymphatic markers. This work suggests that the establishment of tumor-associated inflammation and immunity critically depends on lymphatic vessel remodeling and drainage. Moreover, these results have implications for immunotherapies, the efficacies of which are regulated by the tumor immune microenvironment.
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