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Alveolar macrophage secretion of vesicular SOCS3 represents a platform for lung cancer therapeutics
Jennifer M. Speth, Loka R. Penke, Joseph D. Bazzill, Kyung Soo Park, Rafael Gil de Rubio, Daniel J. Schneider, Hideyasu Ouchi, James J. Moon, Venkateshwar G. Keshamouni, Rachel L. Zemans, Vibha N. Lama, Douglas A. Arenberg, Marc Peters-Golden
Jennifer M. Speth, Loka R. Penke, Joseph D. Bazzill, Kyung Soo Park, Rafael Gil de Rubio, Daniel J. Schneider, Hideyasu Ouchi, James J. Moon, Venkateshwar G. Keshamouni, Rachel L. Zemans, Vibha N. Lama, Douglas A. Arenberg, Marc Peters-Golden
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Research Article Immunology Oncology

Alveolar macrophage secretion of vesicular SOCS3 represents a platform for lung cancer therapeutics

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Abstract

Lung cancer remains the leading cause of cancer-related death in the United States. Although the alveolar macrophage (AM) comprises the major resident immune cell in the lung, few studies have investigated its role in lung cancer development. We recently discovered a potentially novel mechanism wherein AMs regulate STAT-induced inflammatory responses in neighboring epithelial cells (ECs) via secretion and delivery of suppressors of cytokine signaling 3 (SOCS3) within extracellular vesicles (EVs). Here, we explored the impact of SOCS3 transfer on EC tumorigenesis and the integrity of AM SOCS3 secretion during development of lung cancer. AM-derived EVs containing SOCS3 inhibited STAT3 activation as well as proliferation and survival of lung adenocarcinoma cells. Levels of secreted SOCS3 were diminished in lungs of patients with non–small cell lung cancer and in a mouse model of lung cancer, and the impaired ability of murine AMs to secrete SOCS3 within EVs preceded the development of lung tumors. Loss of this homeostatic brake on tumorigenesis prompted our effort to “rescue” it. Provision of recombinant SOCS3 loaded within synthetic liposomes inhibited proliferation and survival of lung adenocarcinoma cells in vitro as well as malignant transformation of normal ECs. Intratumoral injection of SOCS3 liposomes attenuated tumor growth in a lung cancer xenograft model. This work identifies AM-derived vesicular SOCS3 as an endogenous antitumor mechanism that is disrupted within the tumor microenvironment and whose rescue by synthetic liposomes can be leveraged as a potential therapeutic strategy for lung cancer.

Authors

Jennifer M. Speth, Loka R. Penke, Joseph D. Bazzill, Kyung Soo Park, Rafael Gil de Rubio, Daniel J. Schneider, Hideyasu Ouchi, James J. Moon, Venkateshwar G. Keshamouni, Rachel L. Zemans, Vibha N. Lama, Douglas A. Arenberg, Marc Peters-Golden

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Figure 6

Intratumoral administration of SOCS3 liposomes inhibits tumor growth in nude mice.

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Intratumoral administration of SOCS3 liposomes inhibits tumor growth in ...
(A) Experimental scheme: 1 × 106 A549 cells were injected s.c. in athymic nude mice at day 0. After palpable tumors were observed at ~28 days, mice were randomized into 2 groups and treated s.c. with liposomes containing 10 ng SOCS3 or an equal volume of liposomes containing PBS (at 2 sites per tumor) in 50 µl PBS approximately every other day for a total of 6 treatments. Tumor measurements were taken 2 days prior to the first liposome injection and on every subsequent injection day. (B) Mean tumor volumes from empty and SOCS3 treated mice (n = 4–7 mice per group). (C) Images of representative whole tumors from mice treated with empty and SOCS3 liposomes. (D) Representative images of isotype, pSTAT3 and DAPI labeled tumors sections. Solid arrows represent nuclear-associated pSTAT3; open arrowheads represent cytoplasmic-associated pSTAT3. (E) Representative H&E-stained tumors from A549 tumor–bearing mice treated with empty and SOCS3 liposomes. One-way ANOVA with Bonferroni’s post hoc analysis was used for multiple comparisons.

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