THE TLR4-DEPENDENT FIBROBLAST-MONOCYTE AXIS IN TUMOUR-DRAINING LYMPH NODES CONTRIBUTES TO METASTASIS IN TRIPLE-NEGATIVE BREAST CANCER
Angela Riedel and her research group are investigating how tumour cells escape the immune system, with a focus on the lymph nodes. Their latest findings, which have just been published in the journal Immunity, point to new treatment strategies for triple-negative breast cancer. These could one day pave the way for further translational research to make immunotherapies more effective, reduce the risk of metastasis and improve survival rates for patients with aggressive breast cancer.
Würzburg. In almost all solid tumours – i.e. cancers with a solid tissue structure – the detection of tumour cells in the lymph nodes is considered a decisive marker for the progression of the disease. Lymph node involvement has a significant influence on the choice of treatment and the chances of survival for patients. In particular, solid tumours in the breast, on the skin or in the gastrointestinal tract use the lymphatic system as the main route for distant metastasis, for example to the lungs, liver and bones. However, lymph nodes also play an important role in the immune system. They serve as a meeting place for various immune cells that cooperate to recognise and fight pathogens.
This interface between metastasis and immunity is precisely the field of research pursued by Dr Angela Riedel, molecular biotechnologist and junior group leader at the Mildred Scheel Early Career Centre (MSNZ) at Würzburg University Hospital (UKW). She has just published her latest discoveries in Immunity, one of the most renowned journals in immunology. With her small team, she succeeded in conducting an extensive and comprehensive study that included data from both patients and mouse models to generate and substantiate the hypotheses.
Together, they examined the lymph nodes of mouse models and patients with triple-negative breast cancer (TNBC). This is an aggressive form of breast cancer that accounts for about ten to 15 percent of all breast cancer cases and often affects young women. Targeted standard therapies such as modern hormone therapies are not an option here due to the absence of three key characteristics.
Premetastatic environment in the lymph node – monocytes become corrupt, FRCs become accomplices
Their research focused on the tumour-draining lymph node closest to the breast cancer. As it is the first to filter the fluid secreted by the tumour, it is also known as the sentinel lymph node (SLN). Angela Riedel and her research group were the first to demonstrate that the tumour manipulates the environment of the draining lymph nodes even before it settles there. This leads to an altered immune response, which in turn promotes the development of distant metastases.
‘We need to understand metastasis better in order to prevent it,’ emphasises Angela Riedel. ‘This is because the growth of metastases in vital organs poses a significant challenge to the successful cure of breast cancer patients. However, by addressing the immune evasion mechanism in the lymph nodes, we can reduce the risk of metastasis.’
Her research group identified fibroblastic reticulum cells (FRCs) as the main players in the reprogramming of lymph nodes. These cells form the structural framework of the lymph nodes and release special signals via the cytokines CCL2 and CCL7 that attract monocytes. Monocytes are the largest white blood cells and play a key role in the immune system. However, Angela Riedel's team observed that the monocytes in TNBC lymph nodes became corrupted and blocked the activity of T cells, which are normally responsible for fighting cancer cells.
Metastatic niches provide shelter for tumour cells
‘Using the latest methods, such as spatial transcriptomics, single-cell RNA sequencing, proteomics, and immunofluorescence, which we established independently in the laboratory, we were able to decipher that these suppressive monocytes accumulate together with FRCs and T cells in specific niches within the lymph nodes,’ reports Moutaz Helal, who, together with Greta Mattavelli, is the first author of the highly regarded study. He joined the Angela Riedel’s group in April 2020 as part of his master's thesis and has been a doctoral student since October 2021. After completing his bachelor's degree in pharmacy in Egypt, he completed his master's degree in molecular oncology as part of the biochemistry programme at the University of Würzburg. At the MSNZ, he finally discovered his love for bioinformatics. He emphasizes the exceptional quality and modernity of the MSNZ's equipment and campus core facilities.
But how do FRCs support immune escape and promote the formation of these dangerous pre-metastatic niches? The team was able to show that FRCs are activated via Toll-like receptor 4 (TLR4). Typically, TLR4 is a sensor on the surface of cells of the immune system that acts as an alarm system, reporting dangers. However, it is sometimes misused by tumours to slow down the immune system.
Fewer metastases in the lungs due to targeted TLR4 blockade
The group wondered: What happens when this receptor is specifically blocked in the draining lymph node? ‘Our studies in mice showed that targeted inhibition in combination with modern PD1 immunotherapy can restore T-cell activity and significantly reduce distant metastasis in the lungs,’ reports Greta Mattavelli. The Italian-born scientist calls the day she first saw the therapy succeed in the mouse model ‘a day to remember.’ Greta Mattavelli started her PhD in October 2020 as the first doctoral student in Angela Riedel's group. She earned her bachelor's and master's degrees in medical and molecular biotechnology in Milan. In the study, she supervised the laboratory work, which sometimes required night shifts and weekend work for the entire team. And she is more than familiar with the routes across campus to the gynaecological clinic and pathology department.
In collaboration with the UKW Gynaecological Department headed by Prof. Dr. Achim Wöckel and the Institute of Pathology headed by Prof. Dr. Andreas Rosenwald, the team was able to confirm in patient samples that the same process can also be observed in human TNBC patients. This means that therapies targeting this lymph node environment could also improve the prognosis for patients with aggressive breast cancer.
PD-L1 on monocytes in lymph nodes as a marker for PD-1 immunotherapy
At the beginning of 2018, immunotherapy, typically combined with chemotherapy, became the primary treatment recommended in clinical guidelines for patients with PD-L1-positive primary tumours. Background: The surface protein PD-L1 (programmed death ligand 1) expressed by the tumour binds to the PD-1 receptor on T cells and signals them not to attack the tumour. Immunotherapy with antibodies blocks this binding, so that the tumour loses its camouflage and the body's own T cells can once again develop their natural defences. However, PD-L1 is also often found in high concentrations on monocytes in pre-metastatic lymph nodes. PD-1 immunotherapy, which releases the brake and reactivates the T cells, could therefore also be effective in the early stages of breast cancer, regardless of the immunohistochemical analysis of the mammary carcinoma. According to Angela Riedel, PD-L1 expression on cells of the tumor-draining lymph node could be investigated as a marker for PD-1 immunotherapy.
Furthermore, the Riedel group is conducting further investigations into the administration of immunotherapy – systemic therapy versus local therapy. In the breast cancer mouse model, the researchers have already observed that immunotherapy works more efficient when administered subcutaneously, as close as possible to the lymph nodes. The choice of chemotherapy to combine with immunotherapy is also under examination. Another step is the identification of patient groups who would benefit from improved immunotherapy based on their approach.
‘Dr Angela Riedel is an excellent scientist and her work is groundbreaking,’ praises Prof. Dr Achim Wöckel, Director of the Würzburg University Women's Hospital. "Triple-negative breast cancer remains a highly aggressive disease despite effective therapies due to its metastasis patterns. I am very pleased that, together with Angela Riedel's group, we are gaining a better understanding of the interactions between tumour cells and the immune system. These project is linked to the long-term goal of developing innovative therapy options to prevent or reduce the spread of the tumour and testing their effectiveness."
The immune system is also becoming increasingly important in everyday cancer treatment
Angela Riedel finds it not only exciting but also encouraging that the immune system is becoming increasingly important in the treatment of cancer and other diseases and that the latest findings are being incorporated into therapy recommendations in a timely manner. Even simple measures such as sport, exercise, stress management and a healthy diet can have a positive effect on the immune system and metastasis. There are numerous publications on this subject, including one by her. Three years ago, she published an article in the Journal Cancer Immunology Research on how lactic acid, which tumours release during glycolysis, reprograms the downstream lymph nodes and blocks the immune response.
In 2024, together with Prof. Dr. Leo Rasche, she demonstrated in the journal Blood how differently the microenvironment of myeloma cells and extramedullary lesions reacts to the immune system.
Several million euros in third-party funding secured
Angela Riedel studied molecular biotechnology at Bielefeld University and earned her doctorate in molecular oncology at the University of Southern Denmark in Odense. From 2013, she worked as a postdoctoral researcher at the MRC Cancer Unit at the University of Cambridge before moving to the German Cancer Research Centre in Heidelberg in 2017. In 2020, she took over as head of a junior research group at the Mildred Scheel Early Career Centre (MSNZ) in Würzburg. In addition to German Cancer Aid, which funds the MSNZ, her research is supported by the Multiple Myeloma Research Foundation (MMRF), the Else Kröner Fresenius Foundation, the Wilhelm Sander Foundation, the Interdisciplinary Centre for Clinical Research (IZKF) and the ‘Forschung hilft’ foundation.
Dr. Angela Riedel
Junior Group Leader
Mildred-Scheel-Nachwuchszentrum (MSNZ) für Krebsforschung
Universitätsklinikum Würzburg
c/o Universität Würzburg
Institut für Virologie und Immunbiologie
Versbacher Str. 7
D - 97078 Würzburg
Angela Riedel angela.riedel@uni-wuerzburg.de
Greta Mattavelli, Moutaz Helal, Ana Cetkovic, Maximilian J. Krämer, Saskia-Laureen Herbert, Kilian Mielert, Tanja Schlaiß, Anna Frank, Emily Riemer, Mara John, Josefina del Pilar, Martinez Vasquez, Laura Kindl, Jonathan J. Swietlik, Benedikt O. Gansen, Marion Krafft, Emilia Stanojkovska, Hanna Fischer, Ute-Susann Albert, Jonas Bauer, Murilo Delgobo, Arpa Aintablian, Haisam Alattar, Manfred B. Lutz, Felix Meissner, Thordur Oskarsson, Leo Rasche, Gustavo Ramos, Andreas Rosenwald, Achim Wöckel, Angela Riedel. A TLR4-dependent fibroblast-monocyte axis in tumor-draining lymph nodes contributes to metastasis in triple-negative breast cancer. Immunity. 2025. ISSN 1074-7613. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.immuni.2025.08.015
https://www.med.uni-wuerzburg.de/msnz/research-projects/junior-research-groups/r...
Researcher Angela Riedel (centre) with lead authors Moutaz Helal and Greta Mattavelli in the laborat ...
Quelle: Ana Cetkovic
Copyright: AG Riedel UKW
Angela Riedel (front left) and her group at the Mildred Scheel Early Career Center in Würzburg.
Quelle: Kirstin Linkamp
Copyright: UKW
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Researcher Angela Riedel (centre) with lead authors Moutaz Helal and Greta Mattavelli in the laborat ...
Quelle: Ana Cetkovic
Copyright: AG Riedel UKW
Angela Riedel (front left) and her group at the Mildred Scheel Early Career Center in Würzburg.
Quelle: Kirstin Linkamp
Copyright: UKW
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