Neuroblastomas are highly heterogeneous tumors originating from neural crest-derived cells destined to form the sympathetic nervous system. Nearly half of high-risk tumors present with amplification of the MYCN proto-oncogene. Here, we describe a Mycn-driven, transplantable, non-germline, genetically engineered mouse model (Mycn-nGEMM). Mycn-nGEMM tumors recapitulate the immune-evasive, macrophage-rich tumor microenvironment of high-risk, MYCN-amplified human neuroblastoma. Treatment of tumor-bearing mice with anti–PD-L1, but not anti-PD-1 or anti-CTLA-4, inhibited tumor growth, profoundly remodeling the tumor microenvironment by depleting anti-inflammatory macrophages and increasing T cell infiltration. Surprisingly, while tumor cells showed low expression of PD-L1, anti-inflammatory macrophages from both murine and human neuroblastoma expressed PD-L1. We identified cytokines, including macrophage migration inhibitory factor, secreted by the Mycn-nGEMM cancer cells that drive expression of PD-L1 on macrophages. Combining anti–PD-L1 with CD40 agonist antibodies further improved survival in Mycn-nGEMM mice, demonstrating the potential for myeloid-targeting immunotherapies to overcome inhibitory barriers in immune-evasive neuroblastoma.

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