Literature DB >> 10746546

An acidic microenvironment inhibits antitumoral non-major histocompatibility complex-restricted cytotoxicity: implications for cancer immunotherapy.

B Fischer1, B Müller, P Fisch, W Kreutz.   

Abstract

Local immunosuppression may explain the failure of an effective immune response against solid tumors. Although it is well known that the interstitial pH is significantly lower in solid tumors than in normal tissue, only a few studies in the mouse system have investigated the influence of this acidic milieu on the anti-tumoral cytotoxic response. Here the authors report the suppression of human non-major histocompatibility complex (MHC)-restricted cytotoxicity against tumor cells by an acidic extracellular pH (pHe). Unstimulated peripheral blood mononuclear cells, lymphokine-activated killer (LAK) cells, and natural killer cell clones were used as effector cells. According to pH measurements in solid tumors, representative pH values of 7.2 to 5.3 were chosen during the cytotoxic assays. Target cell lysis was measured using two nonradioactive fluorometric methods, namely two-color flow cytometry and a modified calcein-release assay, which allowed cell-mediated cytotoxicity to be measured and compared with that in adherent targets. Using K562, Daudi, or Raji as suspended target cell lines, the cytotoxic activity of unstimulated peripheral blood mononuclear cells and of LAK cells was markedly reduced by a decreasing pHe. An extracellular pH of 5.8 to 5.3 resulted in a nearly complete loss of the cytotoxic response. This pHe-dependent impairment of the killing activity could also be shown for killer cells stimulated with interleukins-7 and -12, phytohemagglutinin, or lipopolysaccharide. The lytic potential of homogeneous natural killer cell clones as effectors was also strictly influenced by the surrounding pH. The pHe dependence of the non-MHC-restricted killer cell functions against tumor cells seems to be a general phenomenon, because the cytolytic activity of LAK cells against six human adherent tumor cell lines (HeLa, HepG2, LS174T, LS174Te, MCF-7, and RT112) was also clearly reduced under acidic conditions. To initiate the killing process, adhesion molecules play an important role in recognition and binding of the target cell. However, flow cytometric analysis revealed that the expression pattern of relevant adhesion molecules was unaffected by acidic pHe. In conclusion, these data clearly indicate an inhibition of non-MHC-restricted cytotoxicity against tumor cells by an acidic pHe, which may contribute to the failure of immunosurveillance against solid tumors. Consequently, efforts to enhance the anti-tumoral cytotoxicity by immunotherapies may have limited success.

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Year:  2000        PMID: 10746546     DOI: 10.1097/00002371-200003000-00004

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Immunother        ISSN: 1524-9557            Impact factor:   4.456


  15 in total

1.  An acidic microenvironment impairs the generation of non-major histocompatibility complex-restricted killer cells.

Authors:  B Müller; B Fischer; W Kreutz
Journal:  Immunology       Date:  2000-03       Impact factor: 7.397

Review 2.  Imaging pH and metastasis.

Authors:  Arig Ibrahim Hashim; Xiaomeng Zhang; Jonathan W Wojtkowiak; Gary V Martinez; Robert J Gillies
Journal:  NMR Biomed       Date:  2011-03-08       Impact factor: 4.044

3.  Regulation of mTORC1 signaling by pH.

Authors:  Aruna D Balgi; Graham H Diering; Elizabeth Donohue; Karen K Y Lam; Bruno D Fonseca; Carla Zimmerman; Masayuki Numata; Michel Roberge
Journal:  PLoS One       Date:  2011-06-29       Impact factor: 3.240

4.  Low pH immobilizes and kills human leukocytes and prevents transmission of cell-associated HIV in a mouse model.

Authors:  Stuart S Olmsted; Kristen V Khanna; Erina M Ng; Steven T Whitten; Owen N Johnson; Richard B Markham; Richard A Cone; Thomas R Moench
Journal:  BMC Infect Dis       Date:  2005-09-30       Impact factor: 3.090

5.  An acidic microenvironment increases NK cell killing of Cryptococcus neoformans and Cryptococcus gattii by enhancing perforin degranulation.

Authors:  Anowara Islam; Shu Shun Li; Paul Oykhman; Martina Timm-McCann; Shaunna M Huston; Danuta Stack; Richard F Xiang; Margaret M Kelly; Christopher H Mody
Journal:  PLoS Pathog       Date:  2013-07-11       Impact factor: 6.823

Review 6.  Carbonic anhydrase IX, a hypoxia-induced catalytic component of the pH regulating machinery in tumors.

Authors:  Olga Sedlakova; Eliska Svastova; Martina Takacova; Juraj Kopacek; Jaromir Pastorek; Silvia Pastorekova
Journal:  Front Physiol       Date:  2014-01-08       Impact factor: 4.566

7.  Low pH impairs complement-dependent cytotoxicity against IgG-coated target cells.

Authors:  Ezequiel Dantas; Fernando Erra Díaz; Pehuén Pereyra Gerber; Antonela Merlotti; Augusto Varese; Matías Ostrowski; Juan Sabatté; Jorge Geffner
Journal:  Oncotarget       Date:  2016-11-08

Review 8.  Hypoxia-Driven Immunosuppressive Metabolites in the Tumor Microenvironment: New Approaches for Combinational Immunotherapy.

Authors:  Yiliang Li; Sapna Pradyuman Patel; Jason Roszik; Yong Qin
Journal:  Front Immunol       Date:  2018-07-16       Impact factor: 7.561

Review 9.  Cariporide and other new and powerful NHE1 inhibitors as potentially selective anticancer drugs--an integral molecular/biochemical/metabolic/clinical approach after one hundred years of cancer research.

Authors:  Salvador Harguindey; Jose Luis Arranz; Julian David Polo Orozco; Cyril Rauch; Stefano Fais; Rosa Angela Cardone; Stephan J Reshkin
Journal:  J Transl Med       Date:  2013-11-06       Impact factor: 5.531

Review 10.  Immunometabolism in cancer at a glance.

Authors:  Katrin Singer; Wan-Chen Cheng; Marina Kreutz; Ping-Chih Ho; Peter J Siska
Journal:  Dis Model Mech       Date:  2018-08-02       Impact factor: 5.758

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