| Literature DB >> 24496456 |
D E Oppenheim1, R Spreafico2, A Etuk2, D Malone2, E Amofah2, C Peña-Murillo2, T Murray2, L McLaughlin2, B S Choi2, S Allan3, A Belousov4, A Passioukov5, C Gerdes5, P Umaña5, F Farzaneh1, P Ross6.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: The epidermal growth factor receptor (EGFR) is overexpressed in colorectal cancer (CRC), and is correlated with poor prognosis, making it an attractive target for monoclonal antibody (mAb) therapy. A component of the therapeutic efficacy of IgG1 mAbs is their stimulation of antibody-dependent cellular cytotoxicity (ADCC) by natural killer (NK) cells bearing the CD16 receptor. As NK cells are functionally impaired in cancer patients and may be further compromised upon chemotherapy, it is crucial to assess whether immunotherapeutic strategies aimed at further enhancing ADCC are viable.Entities:
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Year: 2014 PMID: 24496456 PMCID: PMC3950873 DOI: 10.1038/bjc.2014.35
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Br J Cancer ISSN: 0007-0920 Impact factor: 7.640
Figure 1Counts of white blood cells, lymphocytes and subsets in peripheral blood. (A) Blood cell counts. Total white cell (top) or lymphocyte (bottom) counts per microlitre. (B) Lymphocyte subset counts per microlitre of blood. Cohorts are: age-matched healthy controls; and CRC patients at presentation with metastatic disease, on active chemotherapy or second-line chemotherapy failures. Mean and s.d. are shown in red. Patient cohorts were contrasted to the healthy control group using a Fisher's LSD test. *P<0.05. All other comparisons did not reveal significant differences.
Figure 2NK cell frequency and counts in peripheral blood. (A) Frequency in lymphocytes and (B) absolute counts of CD56/CD16+ CD3− NK cells in age-matched healthy controls, CRC patients at presentation with metastatic disease, on active chemotherapy or second-line chemotherapy failures. (C) Percentage of CD16+ in CD56+ CD3− NK cells. Mean and s.d. are shown in red. Patient cohorts were contrasted to the healthy control group using a Fisher's LSD test. No comparisons revealed significant differences.
Figure 3ADCC by NK cells triggered by anti-EGFR monoclonal antibodies. (A) Representative plots of degranulating (CD107a+) NK cells (CD3− CD56+) from a healthy donor. ADCC was triggered by anti-EGFR antibodies in the presence of EGFR+ A431 target cells. (B) Percentage of CD107a+ NK cells in cohorts (age-matched healthy controls, CRC patients at presentation with metastatic disease, on active chemotherapy or second-line chemotherapy failures). Mean and s.d. are shown in red. Comparisons were tested for statistical significance using a Sidak test. ****P<0.0001; ***P<0.001; NS, not significant.
Figure 4CD16-independent NK cell cytotoxicity. (A) Representative plots of NK cell cytotoxic assays in healthy donors, measuring 7-AAD uptake by CFSE+ K562 target cells in the absence (background) or in the presence of increasing numbers of NK cells. (B) Top, specific killing as a function of effector:target ratio normalised for NK cell frequency within PBMCs for each subject. Cohorts are: age-matched healthy controls; and CRC patients at presentation with metastatic disease, on active chemotherapy or second-line chemotherapy failures. Bottom, linear mixed effect model (R2=0.90), split in panels by cohort. The predicted activity is shown with 95% confidence intervals. Patient cohorts were contrasted to healthy donors. *Significant difference of slope at α=0.05.