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Lung Tumors Tap Nerve–Brain Circuit to Thwart Immunity, Mouse Study Finds

The Nature paper reports that disabling tumour-linked sensory neurons cut growth by more than half, pointing to peripheral neural signalling as a therapeutic target.

Overview

  • Microscopy in mouse models showed sensory neurons surrounding and penetrating lung tumors, forming physical connections with cancer cells.
  • The team mapped a tumor-to-brain loop in which vagal sensory inputs reach the brainstem and trigger a sympathetic stress response that suppresses local antitumor activity.
  • Noradrenaline released in the tumor microenvironment reprogrammed macrophages via β2-adrenergic receptors, which in turn blunted T cell responses.
  • Genetic inactivation of the implicated sensory neurons produced a greater than 50% reduction in tumor growth, whereas extended pharmacological attempts initially showed no effect.
  • Researchers emphasize the findings are preclinical and require validation in humans, highlighting the peripheral nervous system as an underexplored avenue for cancer therapy.