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Publication : TBK1-Zyxin signaling controls tumor-associated macrophage recruitment to mitigate antitumor immunity.

First Author  Zhou R Year  2024
Journal  EMBO J Volume  43
Issue  21 Pages  4984-5017
PubMed ID  39304793 Mgi Jnum  J:358061
Mgi Id  MGI:7779528 Doi  10.1038/s44318-024-00244-9
Citation  Zhou R, et al. (2024) TBK1-Zyxin signaling controls tumor-associated macrophage recruitment to mitigate antitumor immunity. EMBO J 43(21):4984-5017
abstractText  Mechanical control is fundamental for cellular localization within a tissue, including for tumor-associated macrophages (TAMs). While the innate immune sensing pathways cGAS-STING and RLR-MAVS impact the pathogenesis and therapeutics of malignant diseases, their effects on cell residency and motility remain incompletely understood. Here, we uncovered that TBK1 kinase, activated by cGAS-STING or RLR-MAVS signaling in macrophages, directly phosphorylates and mobilizes Zyxin, a key regulator of actin dynamics. Under pathological conditions and in STING or MAVS signalosomes, TBK1-mediated Zyxin phosphorylation at S143 facilitates rapid recruitment of phospho-Zyxin to focal adhesions, leading to subsequent F-actin reorganization and reduced macrophage migration. Intratumoral STING-TBK1-Zyxin signaling was evident in TAMs and critical in antitumor immunity. Furthermore, myeloid-specific or global disruption of this signaling decreased the population of CD11b(+) F4/80(+) TAMs and promoted PD-1-mediated antitumor immunotherapy. Thus, our findings identify a new biological function of innate immune sensing pathways by regulating macrophage tissue localization, thus providing insights into context-dependent mitigation of antitumor immunity.
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