| Literature DB >> 24071829 |
Ivana Türbachova1, Tim Schwachula1, Ines Vasconcelos1, Alexander Mustea2, Tina Baldinger1, Katherine A Jones3, Hermann Bujard4, Alexander Olek5, Klaus Olek6, Katharina Gellhaus1, Ioana Braicu7, Dominique Könsgen2, Christy Fryer8, Elisabetta Ravot9, Alexander Hellwag1, Nicole Westerfeld10, Oliver J Gruss11, Markus Meissner12, Mazahir T Hasan13, Michael Weber1, Ulrich Hoffmüller1, Sven Zimmermann1, Christoph Loddenkemper14, Sven Mahner15, Nina Babel16, Els Berns17, Richard Adams18, Robert Zeilinger19, Udo Baron1, Ignace Vergote20, Tim Maughan21, Frederik Marme22, Thorsten Dickhaus23, Jalid Sehouli7, Sven Olek1.
Abstract
The adaptive immune system is involved in tumor establishment and aggressiveness. Tumors of the ovaries, an immune-privileged organ, spread via transceolomic routes and rarely to distant organs. This is contrary to tumors of non-immune privileged organs, which often disseminate hematogenously to distant organs. Epigenetics-based immune cell quantification allows direct comparison of the immune status in benign and malignant tissues and in blood. Here, we introduce the "cellular ratio of immune tolerance" (immunoCRIT) as defined by the ratio of regulatory T cells to total T lymphocytes. The immunoCRIT was analyzed on 273 benign tissue samples of colorectal, bronchial, renal and ovarian origin as well as in 808 samples from primary colorectal, bronchial, mammary and ovarian cancers. ImmunoCRIT is strongly increased in all cancerous tissues and gradually augmented strictly dependent on tumor aggressiveness. In peripheral blood of ovarian cancer patients, immunoCRIT incrementally increases from primary diagnosis to disease recurrence, at which distant metastases frequently occur. We postulate that non-pathological immunoCRIT values observed in peripheral blood of immune privileged ovarian tumor patients are sufficient to prevent hematogenous spread at primary diagnosis. Contrarily, non-immune privileged tumors establish high immunoCRIT in an immunological environment equivalent to the bloodstream and thus spread hematogenously to distant organs. In summary, our data suggest that the immunoCRIT is a powerful marker for tumor aggressiveness and disease dissemination.Entities:
Keywords: T lymphocytes; epigenetic immunophenotyping; immunoCRIT; ovarian cancer; regulatory T cells; tumor immunology; tumor metastasis
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Year: 2013 PMID: 24071829 DOI: 10.4161/epi.26334
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Epigenetics ISSN: 1559-2294 Impact factor: 4.528