(Press-News.org) Cancer cells and tumors do not exist in a vacuum. Far from the isolation and self-sufficiency of the fictional Wakanda, tumors develop in and alter the nearby milieu of immune cells, connective tissue, blood vessels and a sea of proteins and carbohydrates that provide structure and other supportive functions.
Cancer cells interact with this neighborhood — which scientists term the tumor microenvironment — in many ways, including obtaining extra resources needed to fuel their unchecked growth. Like a fishing trawler deploying its net, pancreatic ductal adenocarcinoma (PDAC) cells reform their cell surfaces to grab additional nutrients from the jelly-like substance between cells called the extracellular matrix.
This cellular scavenging process — known as macropinocytosis — affects the area surrounding the tumor, making the connective tissue stiffer and preventing immune cells from reaching the tumor.
Scientists at the NCI-Designated Cancer Center at Sanford Burnham Prebys published findings July 24, 2025, in Cancer Cell demonstrating that blocking macropinocytosis reshapes the tumor microenvironment to be less fibrous and to allow more access to immune cells. These changes made immunotherapy and chemotherapy more effective in treating PDAC tumors in mice.
The researchers started by observing cells in the tumor microenvironment called fibroblasts that typically form connective tissue and produce many components of the extracellular matrix that are captured during macropinocytosis. In the presence of a tumor, some nearby fibroblasts are coerced to become cancer-associated fibroblasts (CAF) that help tumors grow.
“These CAFs are among the cells surrounding the tumor, and they will support tumor growth by providing metabolites and growth signals, as well as helping in other ways,” said Yijuan Zhang, PhD, a staff scientist at Sanford Burnham Prebys and lead author of the study.
The scientists found that blocking macropinocytosis exacerbated the metabolic stress experienced by CAFs that are deprived of glutamine, one of the 20 amino acids used to build proteins throughout the body. Because PDAC relies upon glutamine much more than other cancers, CAFs in the pancreatic cancer tumor microenvironment are routinely starved of glutamine. After preventing pancreatic CAFs from using the same scrounging strategy as PDAC tumors, the scientists observed a change to a different subtype of CAF marked by the expression of genes that promote inflammation.
“Most pancreatic CAFs are myofibroblasts that promote stiffness and density in the tumor microenvironment and make it more difficult for immune cells and drugs to reach the tumor,” said Cosimo Commisso, PhD, senior author and interim director and deputy director of the institute’s cancer center. “Our experiments led to a subtype reprogramming with fewer myofibroblasts and more inflammatory CAFs, and we wondered how this change would affect the overall tumor microenvironment.”
The research team found that significant changes in the tumor neighborhood resulted from preventing macropinocytosis in CAFs.
“There were fewer deposits of collagen that make the tumor microenvironment stiff or fibrotic, more access for CD4+ and CD8+ T cells to infiltrate the tumor, and vascular expansion, which means a widening of blood vessels that can promote drug delivery,” said Zhang.
The investigators then wanted to see how these tumor microenvironment modifications might make a difference for patients with PDAC and other cancers that rely on macropinocytosis for fuel. They tested the effects of combining a treatment to block macropinocytosis with immunotherapy and chemotherapy.
“Infiltrating T cells are rich in a cell surface protein called PD-1 that dampens the immune response, so we combined a macropinocytosis inhibitor called EIPA with an anti-PD-1 antibody,” said Commisso. “We found it significantly suppressed tumor metastasis and prolonged mouse survival.”
“Our findings were similar when using EIPA as a pre-treatment before using the chemotherapy gemcitabine,” said Zhang. “In addition to synergistically suppressing tumor growth in mice with PDAC, it also reduced the spread of micrometastases in the lungs.”
The scientists will continue to explore how to prevent tumors from scavenging energy to reshape the tumor microenvironment into one that makes cancer treatments more effective.
“We believe this is a very promising strategy to pursue for developing combination therapies for cancer patients,” said Commisso. “Especially for pancreatic cancer that is the third leading causes of cancer deaths despite accounting for only three percent of cases.”
Additional authors include:
Li Ling, Rabi Murad, Swetha Maganti, Ambroise Manceau, Hannah A. Hetrick, Madelaine Neff, Cheska Marie Galapate, Shea F. Grenier, Florent Carrette, Karen Duong-Polk, Anindya Bagchi, David A. Scott, Yoav Altman, Jennifer L. Hope and Linda M. Bradley from Sanford Burnham Prebys
Andrew M. Lowy from the University of California San Diego
The study was supported by the National Institutes of Health and the National Cancer Institute.
The study’s DOI is 10.1016/j.ccell.2025.06.021.
END
Reshaping tumor neighborhoods to give treatments a boost
Study shows that blocking a fuel source changes tissue near pancreatic tumors, enabling more effective immunotherapy and chemotherapy
2025-07-24
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[Press-News.org] Reshaping tumor neighborhoods to give treatments a boostStudy shows that blocking a fuel source changes tissue near pancreatic tumors, enabling more effective immunotherapy and chemotherapy