Clever-1 inhibition in human cancer: consequences and control of bexmarilimab-induced macrophage activation

dc.contributor.authorRannikko, Jenna
dc.contributor.departmentfi=Biolääketieteen laitos|en=Institute of Biomedicine|-
dc.contributor.facultyfi=Lääketieteellinen tiedekunta|en=Faculty of Medicine|-
dc.contributor.studysubjectfi=Immunologia|en=Immunology|-
dc.date.accessioned2026-03-17T11:58:25Z
dc.date.available2026-03-17T11:58:25Z
dc.date.issued2026-04-17
dc.description.abstractCancer immunotherapy enhances the immune system’s ability to eliminate cancer cells for remarkable efficacy, but new therapies are needed to combat treatment resistance. Tumor-associated macrophages (TAMs) drive cancer progression largely through immunosuppression, and inhibiting their immunoregulatory scavenger receptor Clever-1 restores anti-tumor immunity in mice. A Clever-1-blocking humanized antibody bexmarilimab, developed to exploit this mechanism, entered first-in-human clinical testing for advanced solid tumors (MATINS trial) in 2018. This thesis aimed to elucidate the immunological consequences of human macrophage Clever-1 blockade and to identify regulators of bexmarilimab treatment sensitivity. The presented transcriptomic, single-cell and spatially resolved analyses of clinical patient samples, patient-derived cells and tumor explants provide the first functional characterization of Clever-1 inhibition in human cancer. We discovered bexmarilimab to disrupt tolerogenic lipid metabolism pathways and lysosomal acidification in monocytes and macrophages, resulting in their pro-inflammatory activation. In patients, monocyte and TAM reprogramming was accompanied by interferon and T-cell responses, both in the circulation and within tumors demonstrating disease stabilization. Similar immune responses occurred in one third of bexmarilimab-treated patient-derived cancer models, enabling recognition of bexmarilimab-sensitive tumor explant cultures with a gene signature identified in this thesis. Patient-derived cancer models additionally revealed that bexmarilimab-treated TAMs secrete CXCL10 for T-cell recruitment and that the tumor secretome regulates bexmarilimab responses more strongly than macrophage origin or cellular neighborhoods. Across the studies, bexmarilimab-induced immune responses were principally observed in interferon-poor tumor microenvironments, while chronic interferon priming impaired bexmarilimab-mediated macrophage activation. Additionally, responsive tumors had abundant intratumoral Clever-1+ TAMs and low PD-L1 expression, while lacking IL4I1+ TAMs and regulatory T cells. In conclusion, bexmarilimab activates macrophage- and T-cell-mediated immunity in non-inflamed tumors, which are mostly resistant to the current T-cell directed cancer immunotherapies effective in T-cell- and interferon-rich tumors.-
dc.description.accessibilityfeaturenavigointi mahdollista-
dc.description.accessibilityfeaturekuvilla vaihtoehtoiset kuvaukset-
dc.description.accessibilityfeaturetaulukot saavutettavia-
dc.description.accessibilityfeaturelooginen lukemisjärjestys-
dc.format.contentfulltext-
dc.identifier.olddbid214672
dc.identifier.oldhandle10024/197687
dc.identifier.urihttps://www.utupub.fi/handle/11111/27258
dc.identifier.urnURN:ISBN:978-952-02-0606-2-
dc.language.isoeng-
dc.publisherfi=Turun yliopisto|en=University of Turku|-
dc.relation.ispartofseriesTurun yliopiston julkaisuja - Annales Universitatis Turkuensis D: Medica & Odontologica-
dc.relation.issn2343-3213-
dc.relation.numberinseries1958-
dc.source.identifierhttps://www.utupub.fi/handle/10024/197687
dc.titleClever-1 inhibition in human cancer: consequences and control of bexmarilimab-induced macrophage activation-
dc.type.ontasotfi=Artikkeliväitöskirja|en=Doctoral dissertation (article-based)|-

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