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Neutrophils in Cancer: Phenotypic Heterogeneity Across Tumor Models and Significant Alteration of Splenic Neutrophil Phenotype in Lymphosarcoma RLS40 Model Following DNase I Treatment. / Sounbuli, Khetam; Alekseeva, Ludmila A.; Sen’kova, Aleksandra V. et al.

In: Cancers, Vol. 17, No. 16, 2631, 12.08.2025.

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@article{b34cf7bdbcc040fb958f49b896a7c288,
title = "Neutrophils in Cancer: Phenotypic Heterogeneity Across Tumor Models and Significant Alteration of Splenic Neutrophil Phenotype in Lymphosarcoma RLS40 Model Following DNase I Treatment",
abstract = "Background/Objectives: Neutrophils have recently gained significant attention due to their heterogeneity in tumor settings. Recent data showed neutrophil pro- and anti-tumor profiles during tumor progression. However, the concessive causes of neutrophil skewing toward one or another profile are not fully understood. Methods: In this study, using RT-qPCR, flowcytometry, and confocal microscopy, we investigated the phenotype of splenic neutrophils of mice bearing Lewis lung carcinoma LLC, RLS40 lymphosarcoma, and B16 melanoma. Results: Our data showed an immunosuppressive phenotype in the case of the LLC model with PD-L1 and IL10 expression. In the B16 model, minimal changes in the neutrophil phenotype were observed, regardless of tumor size. In the RLS40 model, the neutrophil phenotype was associated with the tumor growth rate, where, in aggressively progressed tumors (RLS40High), CCL17 was expressed, while, in mice with controlled tumor growth (RLS40Low), anti-tumor markers were expressed (FAS, ICAM-1, PD-L1). DNase I treatment significantly reduced tumor growth and metastasis in the RLS40 model but not in B16, enhanced the anti-tumor profile in RLS40 neutrophils, and tended to reduce NET formation induced by A23187. Conclusions: The phenotype of neutrophils from tumor-bearing mice is influenced by the tumor type and progression stage. DNase I had anti-tumor, antimetastatic, and immunostimulatory effects and significantly modified the neutrophil profile in the immunogenic model RLS40.",
keywords = "DNase I, NETosis, neutrophil, neutrophil extracellular traps, splenic neutrophils, tumor-associated neutrophils",
author = "Khetam Sounbuli and Alekseeva, {Ludmila A.} and Sen{\textquoteright}kova, {Aleksandra V.} and Markov, {Oleg V.} and Savin, {Innokenty A.} and Zenkova, {Marina A.} and Mironova, {Nadezhda L.}",
note = "This research was funded by the Russian Science Foundation (grant no. 19-74-30011) and by the Russian State-funded budget project of ICBFM (grant no. 125012300659-6).",
year = "2025",
month = aug,
day = "12",
doi = "10.3390/cancers17162631",
language = "English",
volume = "17",
journal = "Cancers",
issn = "2072-6694",
publisher = "Multidisciplinary Digital Publishing Institute (MDPI)",
number = "16",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Neutrophils in Cancer: Phenotypic Heterogeneity Across Tumor Models and Significant Alteration of Splenic Neutrophil Phenotype in Lymphosarcoma RLS40 Model Following DNase I Treatment

AU - Sounbuli, Khetam

AU - Alekseeva, Ludmila A.

AU - Sen’kova, Aleksandra V.

AU - Markov, Oleg V.

AU - Savin, Innokenty A.

AU - Zenkova, Marina A.

AU - Mironova, Nadezhda L.

N1 - This research was funded by the Russian Science Foundation (grant no. 19-74-30011) and by the Russian State-funded budget project of ICBFM (grant no. 125012300659-6).

PY - 2025/8/12

Y1 - 2025/8/12

N2 - Background/Objectives: Neutrophils have recently gained significant attention due to their heterogeneity in tumor settings. Recent data showed neutrophil pro- and anti-tumor profiles during tumor progression. However, the concessive causes of neutrophil skewing toward one or another profile are not fully understood. Methods: In this study, using RT-qPCR, flowcytometry, and confocal microscopy, we investigated the phenotype of splenic neutrophils of mice bearing Lewis lung carcinoma LLC, RLS40 lymphosarcoma, and B16 melanoma. Results: Our data showed an immunosuppressive phenotype in the case of the LLC model with PD-L1 and IL10 expression. In the B16 model, minimal changes in the neutrophil phenotype were observed, regardless of tumor size. In the RLS40 model, the neutrophil phenotype was associated with the tumor growth rate, where, in aggressively progressed tumors (RLS40High), CCL17 was expressed, while, in mice with controlled tumor growth (RLS40Low), anti-tumor markers were expressed (FAS, ICAM-1, PD-L1). DNase I treatment significantly reduced tumor growth and metastasis in the RLS40 model but not in B16, enhanced the anti-tumor profile in RLS40 neutrophils, and tended to reduce NET formation induced by A23187. Conclusions: The phenotype of neutrophils from tumor-bearing mice is influenced by the tumor type and progression stage. DNase I had anti-tumor, antimetastatic, and immunostimulatory effects and significantly modified the neutrophil profile in the immunogenic model RLS40.

AB - Background/Objectives: Neutrophils have recently gained significant attention due to their heterogeneity in tumor settings. Recent data showed neutrophil pro- and anti-tumor profiles during tumor progression. However, the concessive causes of neutrophil skewing toward one or another profile are not fully understood. Methods: In this study, using RT-qPCR, flowcytometry, and confocal microscopy, we investigated the phenotype of splenic neutrophils of mice bearing Lewis lung carcinoma LLC, RLS40 lymphosarcoma, and B16 melanoma. Results: Our data showed an immunosuppressive phenotype in the case of the LLC model with PD-L1 and IL10 expression. In the B16 model, minimal changes in the neutrophil phenotype were observed, regardless of tumor size. In the RLS40 model, the neutrophil phenotype was associated with the tumor growth rate, where, in aggressively progressed tumors (RLS40High), CCL17 was expressed, while, in mice with controlled tumor growth (RLS40Low), anti-tumor markers were expressed (FAS, ICAM-1, PD-L1). DNase I treatment significantly reduced tumor growth and metastasis in the RLS40 model but not in B16, enhanced the anti-tumor profile in RLS40 neutrophils, and tended to reduce NET formation induced by A23187. Conclusions: The phenotype of neutrophils from tumor-bearing mice is influenced by the tumor type and progression stage. DNase I had anti-tumor, antimetastatic, and immunostimulatory effects and significantly modified the neutrophil profile in the immunogenic model RLS40.

KW - DNase I

KW - NETosis

KW - neutrophil

KW - neutrophil extracellular traps

KW - splenic neutrophils

KW - tumor-associated neutrophils

UR - https://www.scopus.com/pages/publications/105014515294

UR - https://www.mendeley.com/catalogue/ec2ea1fc-2a7b-3420-a5d9-1e6fec9c94db/

U2 - 10.3390/cancers17162631

DO - 10.3390/cancers17162631

M3 - Article

C2 - 40867260

VL - 17

JO - Cancers

JF - Cancers

SN - 2072-6694

IS - 16

M1 - 2631

ER -

ID: 68971566