| Literature DB >> 24949488 |
Dan A Erkes1, Senthamil R Selvan2.
Abstract
Haptens are small molecule irritants that bind to proteins and elicit an immune response. Haptens have been commonly used to study allergic contact dermatitis (ACD) using animal contact hypersensitivity (CHS) models. However, extensive research into contact hypersensitivity has offered a confusing and intriguing mechanism of allergic reactions occurring in the skin. The abilities of haptens to induce such reactions have been frequently utilized to study the mechanisms of inflammatory bowel disease (IBD) to induce autoimmune-like responses such as autoimmune hemolytic anemia and to elicit viral wart and tumor regression. Hapten-induced tumor regression has been studied since the mid-1900s and relies on four major concepts: (1) ex vivo haptenation, (2) in situ haptenation, (3) epifocal hapten application, and (4) antigen-hapten conjugate injection. Each of these approaches elicits unique responses in mice and humans. The present review attempts to provide a critical appraisal of the hapten-mediated tumor treatments and offers insights for future development of the field.Entities:
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Year: 2014 PMID: 24949488 PMCID: PMC4052058 DOI: 10.1155/2014/175265
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Immunol Res ISSN: 2314-7156 Impact factor: 4.818
Figure 1The likely pathway of the “sensitization” phase of contact hypersensitivity. (a) Hapten application induces strong innate immune mechanisms, causing cell death and the release of danger signals and endogenous ligands, leading to cytokine release, IL-1β, IL-18, TNFα, and GM-CSF, by keratinocytes (KC). This release will stimulate dermal antigen-presenting cells (dAPCs), langerhans cells, and dermal dendritic cells, to take up haptenated antigen and migrate to the dLN to activate naïve T-cells. Mast cells will aid in this migration by releasing TNFα. (b) iNKT cells in the liver will be activated by APCs presenting haptenated glycolipid by CD1d. This will cause cytokine release, IL-4, to stimulate naïve B-1 cells in the peritoneal cavity, along with the binding of hapten-antigen by membrane IgM. This will cause migration of these cells to the dLN, and subsequent maturation into CS-initiating B-1 cells, which release antihapten IgM into circulation.
Figure 2The likely pathway of the “early elicitation” phase of contact hypersensitivity. The red arrows and type indicate the early elicitation phase. Hapten challenge will restimulate iNKT cells to release IL-4, which along with hapten-antigen will stimulate CS-initiating B-1 cells as seen in Figure 1. These cells will release IgM, which will bind to hapten-antigen. This will cause formation of C5a, triggering activation of mast cells to produce TNFα and serotonin, increasing immune cell trafficking into the area and TNFα and CXCL2 to stimulate neutrophils in the dermis. Neutrophils will also be activated by CXCL1 and CXCL2 released from haptenation of the keratinocytes. Their activation will cause damage at the challenge site as well as more CXCL1 and CXCL2 release, inducing immune cell trafficking to the area as illustrated in Figure 3. Lastly, haptenated keratinocytes will release cytokines to induce immune cell trafficking to the area as depicted in Figure 3.
Figure 3The likely pathway of the “late elicitation” phase of contact hypersensitivity. The red type indicates the “early” elicitation phase and the black arrows indicate the “late” elicitation phase. Hapten-specific memory T-cells will traffic to the hapten challenge site, where they will enter the dermis and divide into multiple different cells subsets. This will be initiated by dermal APCs presenting antigen as well as cytokine release from multiple different cell subsets. The multiple subsets will play different roles in the CHS reaction at the site. Lastly, CXCR6+ hepatic NK cells will traffic to the hapten challenge site and elicit damage.
Summary of the hapten-mediated tumor regression studies.
| Hapten treatment | Author, year | Hapten used for treatment, alone and in combination | Tumor type/cell line used in animal and human studies | Route of administration of haptens and hapten-modified products | Observations |
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| Hamaoka et al., 1979 [ | TNBS, TNP-MGG sensitization and TNP-D-GL pretreatment | X5563 cells in C3H/HeN mice | i.p. TNP-X5563 injection | Significantly delayed tumor growth for up to 15 days |
| Fujiwara et al., 1980 [ | TNBS, TNP-MGG sensitization and TNP-D-GL pretreatment | LSTRA cells in Balb/c mice | i.p. TNP-X5563 injection | Significantly delayed tumor growth for up to 10 days | |
| Flood et al., 1987 [ | TNBS, N/A | Progressor and regressor fibrosarcomas in C3H/HeN mice | s.c. TNP-regressor/TNP-progressor injection | Significantly delayed tumor growth for up to 30 days | |
| Berd et al., 1993 [ | DNFB, DNFB sensitization and CY pretreatment combined with BCG and nodal resection | Stages III and IV metastatic melanoma in patients | i.d. DNP-autologous melanoma injection | 5/46 patient responses for metastatic melanoma and 59% 2-year survival postnodal resection | |
| Sato et al., 1995 [ | DNFB, DNFB sensitization and CY pretreatment combined with BCG and nodal resection | Stages III and IV metastatic melanoma in patients | i.d. DNP-autologous melanoma injection | IFN | |
| Sato et al., 1997 [ | DNFB, DNFB sensitization and CY pretreatment combined with BCG and nodal resection | Stages III and IV metastatic melanoma in patients | i.d. DNP-autologous melanoma injection | DNP-specific T-cells recognize only hapten-modified melanoma | |
| Berd et al., 1997 [ | DNFB, DNFB sensitization and CY pretreatment combined with BCG and nodal resection | Stage III metastatic melanoma postnodal resection in patients | i.d. DNP-autologous melanoma injection | 5-year 45% relapse-free and 58% overall survival (62 patients) | |
| Berd et al., 2001 [ | DNFB, DNFB sensitization and CY pretreatment combined with BCG and nodal resection | Stage IV melanoma with pulmonary metastases in patients | i.d. DNP-autologous melanoma injection | 11/83 patients had responses to treatment, only 2 had complete response | |
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Manne et al., 2002 [ | DNFB, DNFB sensitization and CY pretreatment combined with BCG and nodal resection | Stage III metastatic melanoma postnodal resection in patients | i.d. DNP-autologous melanoma injection | T-cell clones from DNP-vaccine patients with similar TCR VDJ peaks and CDR3 amino acid sequences | |
| Sojka et al., 2002 [ | DNFB, CY pretreatment combined with BCG and nodal resection | 410.1 cells in Balb/c mice | s.c. DNP-410.1 injection | 40% relapse-free survival with DNP-vaccine versus 20% without DNP; CD4+, and CD8+ T cells, and IFN | |
| Berd et al., 2004 [ | DNFB, DNFB sensitization and CY pretreatment combined with BCG and nodal resection | Stage III metastatic melanoma postnodal resection in patients | i.d. DNP-autologous melanoma injection | 5-year 44% overall survival | |
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| Fujiwara et al., 1984 [ | TNCB, TNCB sensitization and CY pretreatment | X5563 cells in C3H/HeN mice | Intratumoral injection of TNCB | >50% primary tumor regression and secondary tumor resistance. Helper T-cells crucial |
| Fujiwara et al., 1984 [ | TNCB, TNCB sensitization and CY pretreatment | X5563 cells, MCH-1-A1 cells, and MCA-induced tumors in C3H/HeN mice | Intratumoral injection of TNCB | >50% primary tumor regression and secondary tumor resistance. Helper T-cells crucial | |
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| Epifocal hapten application | Klein 1969 [ | TEIB and DNCB, N/A | BCC and SCC in patients | Topical hapten application on tumor | Reviews various complete tumor regression cases in various different cancers and patients. |
| Truchetet et al., 1989 [ | DNCB, N/A | Metastatic melanoma in patients | Topical DNCB application on tumor | Reviews the use of DNCB to treat metastatic melanoma in the clinic and in case studies | |
| Strobbe et al., 1997 [ | DNCB, DNCB sensitization on tumor and systemic DTIC | Recurrent melanoma in patients | Topical DNCB application on tumor | 25% complete response with combined DNCB and DTIC treatment | |
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von Nida and Quirk, 2003 [ | DNCB, DNCB sensitization | Metastatic melanoma in patients | Topical DNCB application on tumor | Tumor control for 7 years in metastatic melanoma patient with DNCB application | |
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Herrmann et al., 2004 [ | DNCB, DNCB sensitization | Merkel cell carcinoma in patients | Topical DNCB application on tumor | Complete tumor regression on scalp and CD3+ T-cell and CD28+, KP-1+ Macrophage infiltration | |
| Damian et al., 2009 [ | DPCP, DPCP sensitization | Metastatic melanoma in patients | Topical DPCP application on tumor | Of 7 patients, many had slow growing tumors or tumor regression at DPCP application site | |
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Martiniuk et al., 2010 [ | DPCP, DPCP sensitization | Metastatic melanoma in patients | Topical DPCP application on tumor | Role of Th17 cells in tumor regression | |
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Kim 2012 [ | DPCP, DPCP sensitization | Metastatic melanoma in patients | Topical DPCP application on tumor | Regression of melanoma nodules for 18 weeks | |
| Wack et al., 2001 [ | DNCB, DNCB sensitization on tumor and systemic DTIC | B16F17 cells in C57BL/6 mice | Topical DNCB application on tumor | 72% primary tumor regression and reduced pulmonary metastases | |
| Wack et al., 2002 [ | DNCB, DNCB sensitization on tumor and systemic DTIC | B16F17 cells in C57BL/6 mice | Topical DNCB application on tumor | Repeat 2001 results, CD4+ and CD8+ T cells kill B16 | |
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Lu and Low 2002 [ | Folate-FITC conjugate, BSA-FITC sensitization with adjuvant GPI-0100 and systemic IL-2 and IFN | M109 cells in Balb/c mice | i.v. and i.p. injection folate-FITC conjugate | FITC coating of tumors. 100% overall survival after optimization with combined treatment; survive secondary challenges | |
| Lu et al., 2005 [ | Folate-FITC conjugate, BSA-FITC sensitization with adjuvant GPI-0100 and systemic IL-2 and IFN | M109 cells in Balb/c mice | i.p. injection folate-FITC conjugate | NK-cell induced ADCC and Macrophage opsonization; CD4+ and CD8+ T-cells important. Complete tumor regression in 35 days | |
| Antigen-hapten administration | Lu et al., 2006 [ | Folate-FITC conjugate, BSA-FITC sensitization with adjuvant GPI-0100 and systemic IL-2 and IFN | M109 cells in Balb/c mice | i.p. injection folate-FITC conjugate | Preclinical pharmacokinetic and tissue distribution studies |
| Lu et al., 2007 [ | Folate-DNP conjugate, KLH-DNP sensitization with adjuvant GPI-0100 and systemic IL-2 and IFN | M109 cells in Balb/c mice | i.p. injection folate-DNP conjugate | 60% cure-rate in mice | |
| Amato et al., 2013 [ | EC17 folate-FITC conjugate, EC90 hapten fluorescein with adjuvant GPI-0100 | Renal cell carcinoma in patients | s.c. injection folate-FITC conjugate | Phase-1 Study, 1/28 patients had partial response, 15/28 had stable disease; side effects | |
Contact hypersensitivity immune mechanisms that may lead to tumor regression.
| CHS immune cell | CHS immune reaction | Plausible direct and indirect mechanisms of tumor regression |
|---|---|---|
| Hapten modification of epidermal cells → release of danger signals | ATP release → P2RX7 → NLRP3 activation | IL-18 and IL-1 |
| ROS | Inhibit MDSC maturation [ | |
| Induce cell death in established tumor [ | ||
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| Dermal APCs | Stimulation by haptenization | Possibly stimulate exhausted CD8+ T-cells [ |
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| Keratinocytes | IL-18 release | Protection against colorectal tumorigenesis [ |
| IL-1 | Polarization of IFN | |
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| iNKT cells | IFN | Protective role dependent on Th1 cytokines [ |
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| Mast cells | TNF | Neutrophil activation [ |
| TNF | Chemokine, selectin and adhesion molecule upregulation for hapten-specific T-cell trafficking | |
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| Neutrophils | KC damage (FasL and perforin) | Potential tumor damage, although neutrophils not known to directly kill tumor cells in the first 24 hours [ |
| CXCL1 and CXCL2 | Chemokine, selectin and adhesion molecule upregulation for hapten-specific T-cell trafficking | |
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| CS initiating B-1 cells | Hapten-antibody production | Hapten-tumor IgM → ADCC |
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| CD8+ T-cells | IFN | TIL activation [ |
| Hapten-specific CD8+ T-cells | Haptenated-tumor cell killing | |
| Infiltration into CHS site | Tumor-infiltrating lymphocytes [ | |
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| CD4+ T-cells | Hapten-specific | Rescue exhausted CD8+ T-cells [ |
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| Tc17/Th17 | IL-17 CD4+ and CD8+ Cells | Antitumor immune responses [ |
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| Hepatic NK cells | Hapten-specific NK-cells | Hapten-tumor cell killing [ |
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Contact hypersensitivity reactions that may lead to tumor growth.
| CHS immune cell | CHS immune reaction | Plausible direct effect on tumor | Plausible immune suppression that may lead to tumor growth |
|---|---|---|---|
| Hapten modification of epidermal cells → release of danger signals | Prostaglandin E2 (PGE2) release | Colon cancer growth [ | MDSCs activation [ |
| ROS release | Angiogenesis through VEGF [ | Nitration of T-cell-peptide-MHC interaction → T-cell suppression [ | |
| ATP release → P2RX7 → NLRP3 activation | N/A | Decreased tumor responsiveness to vaccination [ | |
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| LCs and dDCs | TLR4 and 2 Stimulation | N/A | Immune evasion and myeloid cells to promote metastases [ |
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| Keratinocytes | IL-1 | N/A | MDSCs recruitment and infiltration → IL-10 production in tumor site [ |
| CXCL10 Upregulation | Angiogenesis [ | N/A | |
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| iNKT cells | IL-4 and IL-13 | N/A | MDSCs and M2MΦ recruitment and infiltration → IL-10 and TGF |
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| Mast cells | CCL2 and CCL5 upregulation | N/A | TAMs (IL-10 high, IL-12 low, IL-1R |
| TNF | Oxygen delivery to hypoxic tumor cells [ | N/A | |
| CXCL2 | Melanoma cell proliferation [ | N/A | |
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| Neutrophils | CXCL1 and CXCL2 | Melanoma cell proliferation [ | N/A |
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| Hapten-specific T-regs | IL-10 | N/A | Effector T-cell suppression [ |
| CTLA-4 | N/A | CD8+ T-cell exhaustion [ | |
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