| Literature DB >> 22190859 |
Katrin Töpfer1, Stefanie Kempe, Nadja Müller, Marc Schmitz, Michael Bachmann, Marc Cartellieri, Gabriele Schackert, Achim Temme.
Abstract
An intact immune system is essential to prevent the development and progression of neoplastic cells in a process termed immune surveillance. During this process the innate and the adaptive immune systems closely cooperate and especially T cells play an important role to detect and eliminate tumor cells. Due to the mechanism of central tolerance the frequency of T cells displaying appropriate arranged tumor-peptide-specific-T-cell receptors is very low and their activation by professional antigen-presenting cells, such as dendritic cells, is frequently hampered by insufficient costimulation resulting in peripheral tolerance. In addition, inhibitory immune circuits can impair an efficient antitumoral response of reactive T cells. It also has been demonstrated that large tumor burden can promote a state of immunosuppression that in turn can facilitate neoplastic progression. Moreover, tumor cells, which mostly are genetically instable, can gain rescue mechanisms which further impair immune surveillance by T cells. Herein, we summarize the data on how tumor cells evade T-cell immune surveillance with the focus on solid tumors and describe approaches to improve anticancer capacity of T cells.Entities:
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Year: 2011 PMID: 22190859 PMCID: PMC3228689 DOI: 10.1155/2011/918471
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Biomed Biotechnol ISSN: 1110-7243
Figure 1T-cell conversion from anergic to an activated status upon immunogenic cell death of tumor cells. The activation of tumor-specific T cells is dependent on DCs, which endocytose tumor cell debris and apoptotic vesicles. After intracellular processing the DCs present peptides derived from tumor-associated-antigens in complex with MHC class I molecules to T cells. Without the stimulation by danger-associated molecular patterns (DAMPs), DCs remain immature in a hostile immunosuppressive milieu and anergize CD4+ T cells and cytotoxic T cells (CTLs) resulting in peripheral tolerance. The release of inflammatory factors and the appearance of DAMPs lead to activation of DCs (inflammatory DCs) which subsequently upregulate costimulatory molecules of the B7 family. Inflammatory DCs are able to activate naïve CTLs through MHC I tumor peptide/TCR and B7/CD28 crosslinking. Furthermore, inflammatory DCs can activate naïve CD4+ T cells after MHC class II tumor peptide/TCR and B7/CD28 crosslinking. Activated CD4+ T cells in turn support clonal expansion and activity of CTLs by CD40/CD40L interaction and release of inflammatory cytokines such as IL-2.
Selected approaches to tumor immunotherapy.
| Approach | Target | Agent | Immune modulation of host | Phase of experimentation | Main findings |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Vaccination | Glioma | Tumor-cell lysate pulsed DCs | — | Phase I clinical trial completed (NCT00576537) | T-cell responses, detection of infiltrating T cells in recurrent glioma associated with prolonged survival [ |
| Vaccination | Adenocarcinoma of the prostate expressing “prostatic acid phosphatase” (PAP) | DCs | — | Phase III clinical trial completed (NCT00065442) | Increased overall survival, but no increase in progression-free survival of patients [ |
| Vaccination and chemotherapy (Doxetacel) | Breast cancer with expression of MUC-1, CEA | Recombinant Vaccinia and Fowlpox virus (PANVAC) encoding MUC-1 and CEA | GM-CSF treatment during vaccinations | Phase II clinical trial ongoing (NCT00179309) | Induction of T-cell specific immune responses [ |
| Vaccination | Adenocarcinoma of the prostate expressing “TCR | Vaccination with TARP peptides | Use of Montanide ISA-51 VG as adjuvant and concomitant GM-CSF treatment | Preclinical study and phase-I clinical trial ongoing (NCT00908258) | Preclinical study demonstrated induction of T-cell-specific immune responses [ |
| Vaccination | Melanoma | MART-1-, gp100-, tyrosinase- peptides | Subcutaneous injection of IFN- | Phase II clinical trial completed (ECOG E1696) | Neither IFN- |
| Vaccination | Melanoma | MAGE-3.A1 peptide and/or NA17.A2 peptide | peritumoral injection of IL-2, IFN- | Phase I/II clinical trial ongoing (NCT01191034) | — |
| Vaccination | CEA expressing cancers | Denileukin diftitox-mediated depletion of Tregs | Phase I clinical trial ongoing (NCT00128622) | Increased T-cell responses to CEA-positive target cells [ | |
| Vaccination | Melanoma | Tyrosinase/gp100/MART-1 Peptides | Use of Montanide ISA-51 VG as adjuvant, treatment with anti-CTLA4 antibody (MDX-010) | Phase I/II clinical trial ongoing (NCT00028431) | T-cell reactivity against gp100 and MART-1. CTLA-4 antibody dose-related adverse autoimmune effects in skin and gastrointestinal tract [ |
| Melanoma | gp100 peptides | Vaccination using incomplete Freund's adjuvant, treatment with anti-CTLA4 antibody (Ipilimumab) | Phase II clinical trial completed (NCT00094653) | Improved overall survival when applying Ipilimumab irrespective of gp100 vaccination, adverse immunological site effects [ | |
| Vaccination | Glioma | Tumor cell lysate pulsed dendritic cells | TLR agonist Imiquimod | Phase II clinical trial ongoing (NCT01204684) | Improved survival of a subset of glioma patients [ |
| Vaccination | Leukemia | Autologous leukemia cells | Autologous skin fibroblasts transduced with recombinant adenoviral vectors encoding CD40L and IL-2 | Phase I/II clinical trial ongoing (NCT00058799) | Observed immune responses including antibodies against leukemic blasts, prolonged survival time of patients [ |
| TLR agonist monotherapy | TLR 9 in Melanoma | CpG 7909 | — | Phase II clinical trial completed (NCT00070642) | Increased frequencies of T cells reactive against target cells expressing melanoma-associated-antigens in sentinel lymph nodes [ |
| TLR agonist monotherapy | TLR7 in basal cell carcinoma | Imiquimod | — | Phase II clinical trial completed (NCT00189241) | FDA approved for treatment of superficial basal cell carcinoma [ |
| Immunotoxin monotherapy | Renal cell carcinoma | Denileukin diftitox (IL-2-diphteria toxin fusion protein) | Complementary IL-2 treatment | Phase I clinical trial completed (NCT00278369) | Partial depletion of Tregs, no increase in antitumor response rates when compared to controls [ |
| TGF | TGF | TGF | Local depletion of TGF | Phase IIb clinical trial completed (NCT00431561) | Well tolerated, increased median survival time of patients [ |
| Anti-TGF | TGF | Blocking anti-TGF | Systemic depletion of TGF | Phase I clinical trial safety and efficacy study (NCT00356460) | — |
| Anti-PD-1 antibody monotherapy | Refractory or relapsed malignancies (solid tumors) | Anti-PD-1 antibody (MDX-1106) | Blocking extrinsic self-regulatory pathways of T cells | Phase I clinical trial (NCT00441337) | Complete and partial responses, induction of inflammatory colitis [ |
| Anti-CD137/4-1BB monotherapy | Melanoma | Anti-CD137/4-1BB antibody (BMS-663513) | Systemic co-stimulation of T cells | Phase II clinical trial completed (NCT00612664) [ | — |
| Adoptive cell therapy | Melanoma | Chemotherapy-mediated lymphodepletion prior infusion of TILs, high dose IL-2 treatment | Phase II clinical trial ongoing (NCT00513604) | Objective clinical responses, in some cases durable complete responses, toxic side effects after chemotherapy and high IL-2 doses [ | |
| Adoptive cell therapy | Melanoma | Chemotherapy-mediated lymphodepletion prior infusion of TILs | Phase I/II clinical trial ongoing (NCT01236573) | — | |
| Genetic manipulation of T cells for immune therapy | Neuroblastoma cells expressing L1-CAM (CD171) | — | Phase I/II clinical trial completed (BB-IND#9149, FDA) | Weak tumor responses and limited persistence of CD171-CAR [ | |
| Genetic manipulation of T cells for immunotherapy | Non-Hodgkin lymphoma and mantle cell lymphoma | Low dose IL-2 treatment | Phase I/II clinical trial completed (NCT00012207) | No side effects, regression of tumors, persistence of modified T cells for 9 weeks [ | |
| Genetic manipulation of T cells for immunotherapy | Metastatic cancers that express NY-ESO-1 | Chemotherapy-mediated lymphodepletion prior infusion of modified T cells. Modified T cells are further stimulated using ALVAC–ESO-1 vaccine, G-CSF and high dose IL-2 treatment | Phase II clinical trial ongoing (NCT00670748) | — | |
| Genetic manipulation of T cells for immunotherapy | B-cell malignancies with expression of CD19 | Chemotherapy-mediated lymphodepletion prior infusion of TILs, high dose IL-2 treatment | Phase I/II clinical trial ongoing (NCT00924326) | Regression of B-cell lymphoma and elimination of B-cell precursors in patients [ | |
| Genetic manipulation of T cells for immunotherapy | Metastatic cancers expressing Her2 | Chemotherapy-mediated lymphodepletion prior infusion of modified T cells, IL-2 treatment | Phase I/II clinical trial completed (NCT00924287) | — | |
ClinicalTrials.gov identifier, Eastern Cooperative Oncology Group (ECOG) identifier, and FDA-authorized pilot clinical study identifier are given in brackets.
Figure 2Overview of immunosuppressive evasion mechanisms. Tumor cells and tumor-infiltrating Tregs and MDSC can employ a plethora of immunosupressive factors and molecules that impair T-cell function or lead to T-cell anergy and/or apoptosis. Depicted are immunosuppressive self-inhibitory circuits of activated CTLs and also immunosuppressive mechanisms of tumors.