Vascular dysfunction contributes to the pro-oncogenic tumor microenvironment and impedes the delivery of therapeutics. Normalizing the tumor vasculature has therefore become a potential therapeutic objective. We previously reported that the secreted glycoprotein, leucine-rich α-2-glycoprotein 1 (LRG1), contributes to the formation of pathogenic neovascularization. Here we show that in mouse models of cancer, Lrg1 is induced in tumor endothelial cells. We demonstrate that the expression of LRG1 impacts on tumor progression as Lrg1 deletion or treatment with a LRG1 function-blocking antibody inhibited tumor growth and improved survival. Inhibition of LRG1 increased endothelial cell pericyte coverage and improved vascular function resulting in significantly enhanced efficacy of cisplatin chemotherapy, adoptive T-cell therapy and immune checkpoint inhibition (anti-PD1) therapy. With immunotherapy, LRG1 inhibition led to a significant shift in the tumor microenvironment from being predominantly immune silent (cold) to immune active (hot). LRG1 therefore drives vascular abnormalization and its inhibition represents a novel and effective means of improving the efficacy of cancer therapeutics.
Keywords: Tumor vasculature, vascular normalisation, immunotherapy, vascular dysfunction, cancer
O’Connor, Marie N. and Kallenberg, David and Jackstadt, Rene and Watson, Angharad and Alatsatianos, Markella and Ohme, Julia and Camilli, Carlotta and Pilotti, Camilla Pilotti and Dritsoula, Athina and Bowers, Chantelle and Dowsett, Laura and George, Jestin and Wang, Xiaomeng and Ager, Ann and Sansom, Owen J. and Moss, Stephen E. and Greenwood, John, LRG1 Destabilizes Tumor Vessels and Restricts Immunotherapeutic Potency. Available at SSRN: https://ssrn.com/abstract=3732408 or http://dx.doi.org/10.2139/ssrn.3732408
This version of the paper has not been formally peer reviewed.