STAT3 in tumor fibroblasts promotes an immunosuppressive microenvironment in pancreatic cancer.

Journal: Life Science Alliance
Published:
Abstract

Pancreatic ductal adenocarcinoma (PDAC) is associated with an incredibly dense stroma, which contributes to its recalcitrance to therapy. Cancer-associated fibroblasts (CAFs) are one of the most abundant cell types within the PDAC stroma and have context-dependent regulation of tumor progression in the tumor microenvironment (TME). Therefore, understanding tumor-promoting pathways in CAFs is essential for developing better stromal targeting therapies. Here, we show that disruption of the STAT3 signaling axis via genetic ablation of Stat3 in stromal fibroblasts in a Kras G12D PDAC mouse model not only slows tumor progression and increases survival, but re-shapes the characteristic immune-suppressive TME by decreasing M2 macrophages (F480+CD206+) and increasing CD8+ T cells. Mechanistically, we show that loss of the tumor suppressor PTEN in pancreatic CAFs leads to an increase in STAT3 phosphorylation. In addition, increased STAT3 phosphorylation in pancreatic CAFs promotes secretion of CXCL1. Inhibition of CXCL1 signaling inhibits M2 polarization in vitro. The results provide a potential mechanism by which CAFs promote an immune-suppressive TME and promote tumor progression in a spontaneous model of PDAC.

Authors
Julia Lefler, Catherine Marelia Bennett, Katie Thies, Blake Hildreth, Sudarshana Sharma, Jason Pitarresi, Lu Han, Caroline Everett, Christopher Koivisto, Maria Cuitino, Cynthia Timmers, Elizabeth O'quinn, Melodie Parrish, Martin Romeo, Amanda Linke, G Hobbs, Gustavo Leone, Denis Guttridge, Teresa Zimmers, Gregory Lesinski, Michael Ostrowski
Relevant Conditions

Pancreatic Cancer