Description
Radiotherapy is standard of care for inoperable non-small cell lung cancers (NSCLC) but  adenocarcinoma NSCLC respond more poorly than squamous cell NSCLC. Transforming  growth factor  (TGF) activity is induced by radiation and plays a recently recognized role in  the DNA damage response. Here we show in murine lung tumor model that radiation activates  TGF acutely and persistently and that TGF neutralizing antibody, 1D11, systemic treatment  increased tumor control following either fractionated or single high dose radiation regimes.  TGF dependent genes in the irradiated tumor indicated crosstalk between innate and adaptive  immunity but therapeutic benefit of 1D11 in irradiated tumors in immunocompromised mice  suggested that innate immune cells are more influential than the adaptive immune response.  Irradiated tumors in which TGF was blocked were highly hypoxic, exhibit pronounced  microvascular damage and promoted neither cancer-associated fibroblasts nor recruit bone  marrow derived cells (BMDC). Tumor educated immature BMDC were significant sources of  TGF and inhibiting BMDC recruitment achieved tumor growth control in response to RT  comparable to TGF inhibition. Thus, radiation-induced TGF both compromises tumor control  by RT and promotes reestablishment of the tumor microenvironment. Concordant with the  critical role of TGF activity in RT, radiation resistant NSCLC adenocarcinomas exhibit higher  TGF activity compared to squamous cell NSCLC, which suggests a rationale for using TGF  inhibition to augment radiotherapy.