Issue 23, 2025

Behaviorome profiling of anti-tumor and pro-tumor human neutrophil subtypes in a microphysiological system

Abstract

Neutrophils exhibit a paradoxical role in cancer, either combating the tumor or facilitating its progression. Studies in mice have shown that polarizing neutrophils from a pro-tumor “N2” phenotype to an anti-tumor “N1” phenotype can serve as a strategy for immunotherapy. Understanding the behavioral differences between N1 and N2 human neutrophil subtypes in the solid tumor tissue is important for developing novel cancer immunotherapy. However, it is challenging to monitor neutrophil–cancer interactions in the human tumor tissue. In this study, we developed a human cell-based microphysiological system to quantify both real-time and end-point behaviors of N1-like and N2-like neutrophils during their interactions with pancreatic cancer in a 3D collagen matrix. We first validated that N1-like neutrophils showed higher levels of pro-inflammatory hallmarks including ROS production, IL-8 secretion, and NET release and 2D cancer cytotoxicity than N2-like neutrophils. We found that N2-like neutrophils showed greater migration to cancer cells and higher motility after migration than N1-like neutrophils. N1-like neutrophils engaged in longer contact with tumor spheroids and infiltrated greater into tumor spheroids than N2-like neutrophils. N1-like neutrophils also attenuated the progression of tumor spheroids in terms of invasion, proliferation (Ki-67 expression), and epithelial–mesenchymal transition (vimentin expression) compared to N2-like neutrophils, although tumor apoptosis was not affected. Our microphysiological system reveals the distinct “behavioromes” of anti-tumor and pro-tumor human neutrophil subtypes in pancreatic cancer, which may inform the design and development of novel cancer immunotherapies aiming to modulate specific neutrophil behaviors.

Graphical abstract: Behaviorome profiling of anti-tumor and pro-tumor human neutrophil subtypes in a microphysiological system

Supplementary files

Article information

Article type
Paper
Submitted
28 May 2025
Accepted
08 Sep 2025
First published
24 Oct 2025
This article is Open Access
Creative Commons BY license

Lab Chip, 2025,25, 6349-6372

Behaviorome profiling of anti-tumor and pro-tumor human neutrophil subtypes in a microphysiological system

S. Shao, D. Duncko and C. N. Jones, Lab Chip, 2025, 25, 6349 DOI: 10.1039/D5LC00526D

This article is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 3.0 Unported Licence. You can use material from this article in other publications without requesting further permissions from the RSC, provided that the correct acknowledgement is given.

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