Investigator

Tilman Borggrefe

University of Giessen, Institute of Biochemistry

TBTilman Borggrefe
Papers(1)
Endothelial RBPJ Is E…
Collaborators(10)
Adelheid CerwenkaAdrian StögbauerAndreas FischerBenedetto Daniele Gia…Eleni ZimmerElisenda Alsina-Sanch…Francesca De Angelis …Iris MollJacqueline TaylorJuan Rodriguez-Vita
Institutions(3)
Justus Liebig Univers…University Of MannheimGerman Cancer Researc…

Papers

Endothelial RBPJ Is Essential for the Education of Tumor-Associated Macrophages

Abstract Epithelial ovarian cancer (EOC) is one of the most lethal gynecologic cancers worldwide. EOC cells educate tumor-associated macrophages (TAM) through CD44-mediated cholesterol depletion to generate an immunosuppressive tumor microenvironment (TME). In addition, tumor cells frequently activate Notch1 receptors on endothelial cells (EC) to facilitate metastasis. However, further work is required to establish whether the endothelium also influences the education of recruited monocytes. Here, we report that canonical Notch signaling through RBPJ in ECs is an important player in the education of TAMs and EOC progression. Deletion of Rbpj in the endothelium of adult mice reduced infiltration of monocyte-derived macrophages into the TME of EOC and prevented the acquisition of a typical TAM gene signature; this was associated with stronger cytotoxic activity of T cells and decreased tumor burden. Mechanistically, CXCL2 was identified as a novel Notch/RBPJ target gene that regulated the expression of CD44 on monocytes and subsequent cholesterol depletion of TAMs. Bioinformatic analysis of ovarian cancer patient data showed that increased CXCL2 expression is accompanied by higher expression of CD44 and TAM education. Together, these findings indicate that EOC cells induce the tumor endothelium to secrete CXCL2 to establish an immunosuppressive microenvironment. Significance: Endothelial Notch signaling favors immunosuppression by increasing CXCL2 secretion to stimulate CD44 expression in macrophages, facilitating their education by tumor cells.

18Works
1Papers
15Collaborators
Leukemia, Lymphocytic, Chronic, B-CellCell Line, TumorNeoplasmsTumor-Associated MacrophagesCarcinoma, Ovarian EpithelialOvarian NeoplasmsTumor Microenvironment

Positions

Researcher

University of Giessen · Institute of Biochemistry

Education

2012

Prof.

University of Giessen · Institute of Biochemistry