1. Academic Validation
  2. Microglial reprogramming enhances antitumor immunity and immunotherapy response in melanoma brain metastases

Microglial reprogramming enhances antitumor immunity and immunotherapy response in melanoma brain metastases

  • Cancer Cell. 2025 Feb 4:S1535-6108(25)00026-1. doi: 10.1016/j.ccell.2025.01.008.
Francisco Javier Rodriguez-Baena 1 Angel Marquez-Galera 1 Pablo Ballesteros-Martinez 1 Alba Castillo 1 Eva Diaz 2 Gema Moreno-Bueno 3 Jose P Lopez-Atalaya 1 Berta Sanchez-Laorden 4
Affiliations

Affiliations

  • 1 Instituto de Neurociencias (CSIC-UMH), San Juan de Alicante, Spain.
  • 2 MD Anderson Cancer Center International Foundation, Madrid, Spain.
  • 3 MD Anderson Cancer Center International Foundation, Madrid, Spain; Instituto de Investigaciones Biomédicas "Sols-Morreale" CSIC-UAM, Madrid, Spain; CIBERONC Centro de Investigación Biomédica en Red de Cancer, ISCIII, Madrid, Spain; Translational Cancer Research Group, Area 3 Cancer, Instituto Ramón y Cajal de Investigación Sanitaria (IRYCIS), Madrid, Spain.
  • 4 Instituto de Neurociencias (CSIC-UMH), San Juan de Alicante, Spain. Electronic address: berta.lopez@umh.es.
Abstract

Melanoma is one of the tumor types with the highest risk of brain metastasis. However, the biology of melanoma brain metastasis and the role of the brain immune microenvironment in treatment responses are not yet fully understood. Using preclinical models and single-cell transcriptomics, we have identified a mechanism that enhances antitumor immunity in melanoma brain metastasis. We show that activation of the Rela/Nuclear Factor κB (NF-κB) pathway in microglia promotes melanoma brain metastasis. Targeting this pathway elicits microglia reprogramming toward a proinflammatory phenotype, which enhances antitumor immunity and reduces brain metastatic burden. Furthermore, we found that proinflammatory microglial markers in melanoma brain metastasis are associated with improved responses to Immune Checkpoint inhibitors in patients and targeting Rela/NF-κB pathway in mice improves responses to these therapies in the brain, suggesting a strategy to enhance antitumor immunity and responses to Immune Checkpoint inhibitors in patients with melanoma brain metastasis.

Keywords

Rela/NF-kB; immune checkpoint inhibitors; melanoma brain metastasis; microglia.

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