We found a match
Your institution may have access to this item. Find your institution then sign in to continue.
- Title
A GATA4-regulated secretory program suppresses tumors through recruitment of cytotoxic CD8 T cells.
- Authors
Patel, Rupesh S.; Romero, Rodrigo; Watson, Emma V.; Liang, Anthony C.; Burger, Megan; Westcott, Peter M. K.; Mercer, Kim L.; Bronson, Roderick T.; Wooten, Eric C.; Bhutkar, Arjun; Jacks, Tyler; Elledge, Stephen J.
- Abstract
The GATA4 transcription factor acts as a master regulator of development of multiple tissues. GATA4 also acts in a distinct capacity to control a stress-inducible pro-inflammatory secretory program that is associated with senescence, a potent tumor suppression mechanism, but also operates in non-senescent contexts such as tumorigenesis. This secretory pathway is composed of chemokines, cytokines, growth factors, and proteases. Since GATA4 is deleted or epigenetically silenced in cancer, here we examine the role of GATA4 in tumorigenesis in mouse models through both loss-of-function and overexpression experiments. We find that GATA4 promotes non-cell autonomous tumor suppression in multiple model systems. Mechanistically, we show that Gata4-dependent tumor suppression requires cytotoxic CD8 T cells and partially requires the secreted chemokine CCL2. Analysis of transcriptome data in human tumors reveals reduced lymphocyte infiltration in GATA4-deficient tumors, consistent with our murine data. Notably, activation of the GATA4-dependent secretory program combined with an anti-PD-1 antibody robustly abrogates tumor growth in vivo. GATA-binding protein 4 (GATA4) is reported to control cell proliferation in cancers. Here the authors show that GATA4's pro-inflammatory secretome promotes the recruitment of immune cells such as CD8 + T cells to suppress tumour initiation and growth in a non-cell autonomous manner.
- Subjects
CYTOTOXIC T cells; CANCER cell proliferation; TUMOR growth; T cells; TRANSCRIPTION factors
- Publication
Nature Communications, 2022, Vol 13, Issue 1, p1
- ISSN
2041-1723
- Publication type
Article
- DOI
10.1038/s41467-021-27731-5