Abstract

Drug-resistant advanced lung adenocarcinoma (LUAD) is an aggressive malignancy with limited treatment options. A therapeutic strategy for drug-resistant LUAD is to target the tumor associated macrophages (TAMs), because they play an important role in tumor immune escape, progression and metastasis. In this study, we conducted in vivo and in vitro investigation of the inhibitory effect of arsenic trioxide (ATO) on polarization of TAMs educated by LUAD. We found that ATO at a concentration of 4μM disrupted the Notch-dependent positive feedback loop between LUAD and TAMs. In this loop, ATO inhibited the expression of Jagged1 and Notch1 in LUAD and suppressed M2 polarization via down-regulating Notch-dependent paracrine of CCL2 and IL1β. As a result, the secretion of M2-derived TGF-β1 decreased, thus inducing inhibitions of LUAD proliferation, migration, invasion, colony formation and epithelial-mesenchymal transition. In xenograft mouse models, ATO significantly inhibited tumor growth and down-regulated infiltration of M2-like TAMs in tumor tissues. In clinical LUAD biopsy samples, high Jagged1/Notch1 expression positively correlated with tumor-infiltrated M2-like TAMs, leading to poor prognosis. In conclusion, our results identified a novel tumor immunomodulating function for ATO, which can inhibit the polarization of M2-type TAMs to exert anti-tumor effects in the tumor microenvironment. Our results demonstrated the translational potential of repurposing ATO to target TAMs for lung adenocarcinoma treatment.

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