| Literature DB >> 23626949 |
Lucia Fernández1, Raquel Portugal, Jaime Valentín, Roberto Martín, Hannah Maxwell, Marta González-Vicent, Miguel Ángel Díaz, Inmaculada de Prada, Antonio Pérez-Martínez.
Abstract
How the immune system attacks medulloblastoma (MB) tumors effectively is unclear, although natural killer (NK) cells play an important role in immune defense against tumor cells. Interactions between receptors on NK cells and ligands expressed by tumor cells are critical for tumor control by immunotherapy. In this study, we analyzed tumor samples from 54 MB patients for expression of major histocompatibility complex class I-related chains A (MICA) and UL16 binding protein (ULPB-2), which are ligands for the NK group 2 member D activatory receptor (NKG2D). The percentage of MICA and ULBP-2 positive cells was higher than 25% in 68% and 6% of MB patients, respectively. A moderate-high intensity of MICA cytoplasmic staining was observed in 46% MB patients and weak ULBP-2 staining was observed in 8% MB patients. No correlation between MICA/ULBP-2 expression and patient outcome was found. We observed that HTB-186, a MB cell line, was moderately resistant to NK cell cytotoxicity in vitro. Blocking MICA/ULBP-2 on HTB-186, and NKG2D receptor on NK cells increased resistance to NK cell lysis in vitro. However, HLA class I blocking on HTB-186 and overnight incubation with IL-15 stimulated NK cells efficiently killed tumor cells in vitro. We conclude that although NKG2D/MICA-ULBP-2 interactions have a role in NK cell cytotoxicity against MB, high expression of HLA class I can protect MB from NK cell cytotoxicity. Even so, our in vitro data indicate that if NK cells are appropriately stimulated, they may have the potential to target MB in vivo.Entities:
Keywords: HLA-I; NKG2D ligands; NKG2D receptor; medulloblastoma; natural killer cells
Year: 2013 PMID: 23626949 PMCID: PMC3630393 DOI: 10.3389/fonc.2013.00094
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Oncol ISSN: 2234-943X Impact factor: 6.244
Patient characteristics.
| % | Overall survival | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Patient numbers (1990–2010) | 54 | |||
| Patient numbers (1990–2000/2001–2010) | 24/30 | 44/54 | ns | |
| Age (years) | 6.5 ± 4.2 | |||
| Age (<3/>3 years) | 14/40 | 26/74 | 42 ± 1/53 ± 1 | ns |
| Sex (male/female) | 32/22 | 59/41 | 54 ± 1/43 ± 1 | ns |
| Histology (classic/nodular/anaplastic) | 39/11/2 | 74/22/4 | 46 ± 1/68 ± 1/50 ± 3 | ns |
| Resection: CR/PR | 25/28 | 47/53 | 62 ± 1/40 ± 1 | 0.05 |
| Metastasis (no/yes) | 34/16 | 68/32 | 56 ± 1/30 ± 1 | 0.05 |
| Radiotherapy (yes/no) | 40/9 | 82/18 | 60 ± 1/11 ± 1 | 0.000* |
| Relapse (yes/no) | 18/31 | 37/63 | 13 ± 1/69 ± 1 | 0.001* |
| HDCT (yes/no) | 15/31 | 33/67 | 29 ± 1/57 ± 1 | ns |
| Status (CR/PR/dead) | 22/4/22 | 46/8/46 | ||
| Follow up (months) | 60.0 ± 2.6 | |||
| Survival (1990–2000/2001–2010) | 50 ± 7 (52 ± 1/40 ± 1) | ns |
Data are expressed as mean ± SEM. NS: no significance; CR: complete remission, PR: partial remission; HDCT: high dose chemotherapy and autologous stem cell rescue.*Significance at multivariate analysis.
MICA/ULBP-2 positive cells and intensity of cytoplasmic staining by immunohistochemistry on medulloblastoma tumors.
| Positive cells | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| <25 | 25–50 | 50–75 | >75 | |
| MICA | 16 (32) | 3 (6) | 12 (24) | 19 (38) |
| ULBP-2 | 47 (94) | 3 (6) | 0 (0) | 0 (0) |
| MICA | 6 (12) | 21 (42) | 19 (38) | 4 (8) |
| ULBP-2 | 46 (92) | 4 (8) | 0 (0) | 0 (0) |
Figure 1MICA and ULBP-2 staining in MB. (A) MICA negative staining in a sample of MB; (B) MICA high positive staining in a sample of MB; (C) ULBP-2 negative staining in a sample of MB; (D) ULBP-2 weak staining in a sample of MB. Magnification × 200 for all samples. Impact of (E) MICA expression (% > 50%, n = 31 vs. % < 50%, n = 19 and intensity cytoplasmic staining, none/weak, n = 27, vs. moderate/high, n = 23); and (F) ULPB-2 expression (% > 25%, n = 3 vs. % < 25%, n = 47 and intensity of cytoplasmic staining, none, n = 46, vs. weak, n = 4) for overall survival. n/w, none/weak; m/h, moderate/high.
Cell surface expression of HLA-I and NKG2D ligands and NKG2D ligands/HLA-I ratio on medulloblastoma cell lines (HTB-185, HTB-186, HTB-187), neuroblastoma cell line (NB1691) and erythroleukaemia cell line (K562) measured by mean fluorescence intensity (MFI).
| Ligands | HTB-185 | HTB-186 | HTB-187 | NB1691 | K562 | Ligands | HTB-185 | HTB-186 | HTB-187 | NB1691 | K562 |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| HLA-I | 1.50 | 28.57 | 1.34 | 1.83 | 1.88 | MICA/HLA-I | 2.21 | 0.52 | 1.12 | 3.50 | 6.07 |
| MICA | 5.66 | 14.96 | 1.98 | 6.39 | 11.44 | MICAB/HLA-I | 3.78 | 0.50 | 1.48 | 2.50 | 7.29 |
| MICAB | 3.31 | 14.23 | 1.49 | 4.57 | 13.75 | ULBP-1/HLA-I | 3.15 | 0.41 | 1.57 | 4.44 | 7.51 |
| ULBP-1 | 4.73 | 11.72 | 2.10 | 8.11 | 14.16 | ULBP-2/HLA-I | 1.98 | 1.13 | 1.03 | 4.95 | 8.54 |
| ULBP-2 | 2.97 | 32.42 | 1.37 | 9.04 | 16.10 | ULBP-3/HLA-I | 2.89 | 0.36 | 1.28 | 2.17 | 2.58 |
| ULBP-3 | 4.33 | 10.37 | 1.72 | 3.96 | 4.85 | ULBP-4/HLA-I | 1.82 | 0.12 | 1.07 | 2.00 | 2.84 |
| ULBP-4 | 2.73 | 3.34 | 1.43 | 3.65 | 5.34 |
Figure 2Medulloblastoma cell lines, (HTB-185, HTB-186 MB, HTB-187), mean fluorescence intensity (MFI) was determined by multiparametric flow cytometry (Becton Dickinson, FACSCanto II) for HLA-I expression and ligands for the NKG2D activating receptor.
Figure 3HTB-186 MB cell line susceptibility to: resting NK cells, IL-15 stimulated NK cells, NKG2D, MICA, ULBP-2 and HLA class I blocking experiments at different effector target (E/T) ratio. Blocking MICA, ULBP-2 on HTB-186 cells and NKG2D on NK cells reduced NK cell mediated cytotoxicity. HLA class I blocking on HTB-186 cells and IL-15 stimulated NK cells increased NK cell mediated cytotoxicity.