Aspirin prevents metastasis by limiting platelet TXA2 suppression of T cell immunity.
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Metastasis is the spread of cancer cells from primary tumours to distant organs and is the cause of 90% of cancer deaths globally1,2. Metastasizing cancer cells are uniquely vulnerable to immune attack, as they are initially deprived of the immunosuppressive microenvironment found within established tumours3. There is interest in therapeutically exploiting this immune vulnerability to prevent recurrence in patients with early cancer at risk of metastasis. Here we show that inhibitors of cyclooxygenase 1 (COX-1), including aspirin, enhance immunity to cancer metastasis by releasing T cells from suppression by platelet-derived thromboxane A2 (TXA2). TXA2 acts on T cells to trigger an immunosuppressive pathway that is dependent on the guanine exchange factor ARHGEF1, suppressing T cell receptor-driven kinase signalling, proliferation and effector functions. T cell-specific conditional deletion of Arhgef1 in mice increases T cell activation at the metastatic site, provoking immune-mediated rejection of lung and liver metastases. Consequently, restricting the availability of TXA2 using aspirin, selective COX-1 inhibitors or platelet-specific deletion of COX-1 reduces the rate of metastasis in a manner that is dependent on T cell-intrinsic expression of ARHGEF1 and signalling by TXA2 in vivo. These findings reveal a novel immunosuppressive pathway that limits T cell immunity to cancer metastasis, providing mechanistic insights into the anti-metastatic activity of aspirin and paving the way for more effective anti-metastatic immunotherapies.
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Acknowledgements: The authors thank members of University of Cambridge Biomedical Services and the Babraham Institute Biological Support Facility for technical support with mouse experiments; members of the flow cytometry facilities at the University of Cambridge Department of Pathology and the Babraham Institute Flow Cytometry Facilities for their assistance with cell sorting and analysis. The research was supported by Medical Research Council grants MR/Y013301/1, MR/W018454/1 and MR/S024468/1, Wellcome Trust/Royal Society grant 105663/Z/14/Z and an ERC Consolidator Award EP/X024709/1 awarded to R.R. and a JSPS Overseas Research Fellowship awarded to Y.Y.-K. E.L. is supported by the CRI Lloyd J. Old STAR (CRI award 3914) and by the Associazione Italiana per la Ricerca sul Cancro (AIRC, IG 2022–ID 27391 and AIRC 5×1000 programme UniCanVax 22757). P.P. is supported by the Associazione Italiana per la Ricerca sul Cancro (AIRC, IG 2017, ID 20365).
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1476-4687
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Horizon Europe UKRI Underwrite ERC (EP/X024709/1)
Lister Institute of Preventive Medicine (Unknown)
MRC (MR/W018454/1)
Wellcome Trust (105663/Z/14/Z)
MRC (MR/S024468/2)
MRC (MR/Y013301/1)