Abstract
The ability of disseminated cancer cells to evade the immune response is a critical step for efficient metastatic progression. Protection against an immune attack is often provided by the tumour microenvironment that suppresses and/or excludes cytotoxic CD8+ T cells. Pancreatic ductal adenocarcinoma (PDAC) is a highly aggressive metastatic disease with unmet needs, yet the immuno-protective role of the metastatic tumour microenvironment in pancreatic cancer is not completely understood. In this study we find that macrophage-derived granulin contributes to cytotoxic CD8+ T cell exclusion in metastatic livers. Mechanistically, we find that granulin expression by macrophages is induced in response to colony stimulating factor-1. Genetic depletion of granulin reduces the formation a fibrotic stroma, thereby allowing T cell entry at the metastatic site. While metastatic PDAC tumours are largely resistant to anti-PD-1 therapy, blockade of PD-1 in granulin depleted tumours restored the anti-tumour immune defence and dramatically decreased metastatic tumour burden. These findings suggest that targeting granulin may serve as a potential therapeutic strategy to restore CD8+ T cell infiltration in metastatic PDAC, thereby converting PDAC metastatic tumours, which are refractory to immune checkpoint inhibitors, into tumours that respond to immune checkpoint inhibition therapies.