Publications

TIM3(+) breast cancer cells license immune evasion during micrometastasis outbreak

Rozalén C, Sangrador I, Avalle S, Blasco-Benito S, Tzortzi P, Sanz-Flores M, Palomeque JÁ, Torren-Duran P, Dalmau M, Brunel H, Coll-Manzano A, Pérez-Núñez I, Martos T, Servitja S, Pérez-Buira S, Chacón JI, Guerrero-Zotano Á, Martínez de Dueñas E, Guillén Y, Comerma L, Bermejo B, Bigas A, Casanova-Acebes M, Alemany A, Rojo F, Albanell J, Celià-Terrassa T.

Cancer Cell

In metastasis, the dynamics of tumor-immune interactions during micrometastasis remain unclear. Identifying the vulnerabilities of micrometastases before outbreaking into macrometastases can reveal therapeutic opportunities for metastasis. Here, we report a function of T cell immunoglobulin and mucin domain 3 (TIM3) in tumor cells during micrometastasis using breast cancer (BC) metastasis mouse models. TIM3 is highly upregulated in micrometastases, promoting survival, stemness, and immune escape. TIM3+ tumor cells are specifically selected during early seeding of micrometastasis. Mechanistically, TIM3 increases β-catenin/interleukin-1β (IL-1β) signaling, leading to stemness and immune-evasion by inducing immunosuppressive γδ T cells and reducing CD8 T cells during micrometastasis. Clinical data confirm increased TIM3+ tumor cells in BC metastasis and TIM3+ tumor cells as a biomarker of poor outcome in BC patients. (Neo)adjuvant TIM3 blockade reduces the metastatic seeding and incidence in preclinical models. These findings unveil a specific mechanism of micrometastasis immune-evasion and the potential use of TIM3 blockade for subclinical metastasis.

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