Ovarian Cancer Drives TLR5-Dependent Expansion of Myeloid Progenitors Through Systemic Dissemination of Ligands

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Abstract

Ovarian cancer remains the most lethal gynecologic malignancy, due in part to the establishment of a profoundly immunosuppressive tumor microenvironment (TME). While TLR5 signaling has previously been implicated in promoting myeloid cell recruitment to the ovarian TME, the upstream source of ligand and its systemic effects on hematopoiesis remain poorly understood(1,2). Here, we show that ovarian cancer disrupts gut barrier integrity, leading to systemic translocation of TLR5 ligands into the peritoneum, blood, and bone marrow. This translocation correlates with enhanced expansion of myeloid progenitors in the bone marrow of wild-type (WT) but not TLR5-deficient (TLR5 KO) mice, leading to enhanced accumulation of monocytes into the tumor microenvironment. Pharmacologic blockade of TLR5 in tumor-bearing mice alters the composition of tumor-associated myeloid populations, increasing the frequency of monocytes and CCR2-expressing macrophages In the bone marrow of tumor-bearing WT mice. In the bone marrow, blockade of TLR5 signaling led to expansion of granulocyte-monocyte progenitors (GMPs), a phenotype recapitulated in a competitive chimera model. In vitro, stimulation of WT bone marrow cells with purified TLR5 ligands led to enhanced colony formation and skewed differentiation toward granulocyte-macrophage lineages. These data reveal that chronic TLR5 signaling, driven by tumor-induced gut leakage, promotes expansion of myeloid cells within the bone marrow and is a host-intrinsic mechanism driving accumulation of immature monocytes and macrophages into the tumor microenvironment.

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