| Literature DB >> 24085644 |
Justyna Kmiecik1, Jacques Zimmer, Martha Chekenya.
Abstract
Natural killer (NK) cells are lymphocytes that play an important role in anti-tumour immunity. Their potential against brain cancer has been demonstrated in vitro and in vivo, both as a direct anti-tumour agent and in experimental therapies stimulating endogenous NK cell cytotoxicity. However, the clinical translation of these promising results requires detailed knowledge about the immune status of brain tumour patients, with focus on the NK cell population. In this report, we provide an overview of the studies investigating NK cell infiltration into the tumour, emphasizing the need of revision of the methodologies and further research in this field. We also discuss the potential of using autologous or allogeneic NK cells as effector cells in cellular therapy against brain cancer and developing immunotherapies stimulating endogenous NK cell-mediated anti-tumour response, such as blocking inhibitory killer immunoglobulin-like receptors. Combination of NK cell adoptive transfer with targeted therapies, such as anti-EGFR therapeutic antibody (CetuximAb) could also be a potent strategy.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2013 PMID: 24085644 PMCID: PMC3889498 DOI: 10.1007/s11060-013-1265-5
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Neurooncol ISSN: 0167-594X Impact factor: 4.130
NK cell infiltration in intracranial tumours: summary of reviewed literature
| Authors | Tumour type | Method, antibodies | Degree of NK cell infiltration | Distribution of NK cells in the tumour tissue |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Stevens et al. [ | Gliomas grade IV | IHC, Leu7 and Leu11b | Low | Within perivascular cuffs |
| Gliomas grade I–II | No infiltration | |||
| Carcinoma metastases | Intermediate | Around blood vessels and within tumour parenchyma | ||
| Craniopharyngiomas | Intense | No specific distribution | ||
| Meningiomas | Low | – | ||
| Other tumours | Low | – | ||
| Vaquero et al. [ | Brain metastases | IHC, IOT-10 | Less than 10 % of TILs in most cases (39/40) | Mainly associated with vessels and stroma |
| Yang et al. [ | Glioblastomas | IHC, CD56 | Perivascular: intermediate or extensive in app.70 % cases; Intratumoural: intermediate in app. 25 % cases, none in app. 50 % cases | Mostly perivascular/extratumoural |
| Pilocytic astrocytoma | No infiltration | |||
| Rossi et al. [ | Oligodendrogliomas | IHC, Leu11b | No infiltration | |
| Domingues et al. [ | Meningiomas | Flow cytometry, NK cell population defined as CD3-CD19-CD56+ | 0.2 ± 0.3 % of all cells |
IHC immunohistochemistry, TIL tumour-infiltrating lymphocytes, – no data reported
Fig. 1Treatment strategies for using NK cells against brain tumours. a Therapeutic antibodies, such as cetuximab (anti-EGFR antibody) can induce antibody-dependent cellular cytotoxicity (ADCC) mediated by FcγRIIIA receptor (CD16) expressed on NK cells. b Immunoligand is a fusion protein: the part recognising specific antigen is conjugated to ligand for activating receptor. Immunoligand binds tumour-specific antigen and stimulates NK cells (endogenous and/or transferred, both autologous and allogeneic) via interaction with activating receptor (e.g. NKG2D). c Applying KIR-blocking antibody reduces the inhibition of both endogenous NK cells as well as adoptively transferred autologous NK cells. d Transfer of allogeneic NK cells with KIR-HLA mismatch approach. Lack of recognition of tumour’s HLA by inhibitory KIR receptors results in the absence of inhibitory signals and NK cell activation. + activating receptor, L ligand
Fig. 2The interplay of NK and other immune cells in anti-tumour responses. Endogenous and/or adoptively transferred autologous NK cells can be stimulated by immunoligands (1) and/or KIR blocking antibodies (2). Therapeutic antibodies such as cetuximab (anti-EGFR antibody) can induce antibody-dependent cellular cytotoxicity (ADCC) (3). Other possible strategy is cellular therapy with allogeneic NK cells with KIR-HLA mismatch approach (graft vs. tumour effect, GvT) (4). Stimulated and/or alloreactive NK cells are able to directly kill the tumour cells, as well as to secrete pro-inflammatory cytokines such as IFNγ to further stimulate other immune cells: macrophages, microglia (5) and T cells (6). NK cells may play an important role in DC vaccination due to DC-NK cell cross-talk further stimulating anti-tumour immune response (7). Stimulated macrophages, microglia and DC can present tumour-associated antigens (8) and induce CTLs-mediated cytotoxicity (9). + activating receptor, L: ligand