| Literature DB >> 25477886 |
Wouter Scheper1, Zsolt Sebestyen1, Jürgen Kuball1.
Abstract
The broad and potent tumor-reactivity of innate-like γδT cells makes them valuable additions to current cancer immunotherapeutic concepts based on adaptive immunity, such as monoclonal antibodies and αβT cells. However, clinical success using γδT cells to treat cancer has so far fallen short. Efforts of recent years have revealed a striking diversity in γδT cell functions and immunobiology, putting these cells forward as true "swiss army knives" of immunity. At the same time, however, this heterogeneity poses new challenges to the design of γδT cell-based therapeutic concepts and could explain their rather limited clinical efficacy in cancer patients. This review outlines the recent new insights into the different levels of γδT cell diversity, including the myriad of γδT cell-mediated immune functions, the diversity of specificities and affinities within the γδT cell repertoire, and the multitude of complex molecular requirements for γδT cell activation. A careful consideration of the diversity of antibodies and αβT cells has delivered great progress to their clinical success; addressing also the extraordinary diversity in γδT cells will therefore hold the key to more effective immunotherapeutic strategies with γδT cells as additional and valuable tools to battle cancer.Entities:
Keywords: cancer immunotherapy; innate-like lymphocytes; γδT cell diversity; γδT cells; γδTCR
Year: 2014 PMID: 25477886 PMCID: PMC4238375 DOI: 10.3389/fimmu.2014.00601
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Immunol ISSN: 1664-3224 Impact factor: 7.561
Figure 1A broad functional and clonal diversity challenges the clinical success of γδT cells in cancer immunotherapy. New insights into γδT cell biology have pointed to at least three levels of diversity that each have a major impact on the design of successful γδT cell-based interventions to treat cancer. A striking functional diversity has come to light by the identification of new γδT cell subsets, such as regulatory (γδTreg) and IL17-producing (γδ-IL17) γδT cells, that now complement the well-established subsets with antiviral or anti-tumor functions. Within γδT cell populations that perform identical functions, another level of diversity is created by the extraordinarily diverse γδTCR repertoire that results in considerable variation in functional avidities of individual γδT cells. Additional diversity within and across γδT cell populations is represented by variable expression patterns of and complex activation requirements for additional immune receptors, including TLRs, CD8αα, and NK cell receptors such NKG2D, the natural cytotoxicity receptors (NCR) NKp30, NKp44, and NKp46, and activating and inhibitory killer cell immunoglobulin-like receptors (KIRs).