| Literature DB >> 25592450 |
Bruce Lyday1, Tony Chen2, Santosh Kesari3,4, Boris Minev5,6,7.
Abstract
Combining dendritic cell vaccination with the adjuvant effect of a strain of dengue virus may be a way to overcome known tumor immune evasion mechanisms. Dengue is unique among viruses as primary infections carry lower mortality than the common cold, but secondary infections carry significant risk of hypovolemic shock. While current immuno-therapies rely on a single axis of attack, this approach combines physiological (hyperthermic reduction of tumor perfusion), immunological (activation of effector cells of the adaptive and innate immune system), and apoptosis-inducing pathways (sTRAIL) to destroy tumor cells. The premise of using multiple mechanisms of action in synergy with a decline in the ability of the tumor cells to employ resistance methods suggests the potential of this combination approach in cancer immunotherapy.Entities:
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Year: 2015 PMID: 25592450 PMCID: PMC4307212 DOI: 10.1186/s12967-014-0349-0
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Transl Med ISSN: 1479-5876 Impact factor: 5.531
Figure 1Sequence of events showing how immune responses to pathogens can impact the immune response to tumor cells.
Figure 2Dengue fever and mechanisms of the immune response to the virus. NS1: nonstructural protein 1.
Cytokine levels induced by dengue virus
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| IL-1β | 9.4 pg/ml | 745 pg/ml | 79X | In vitro [ |
| IL-2 | 2.1 U/ml | 60.3 U/ml | 29X | In vivo [ |
| IL-7 | 18 pg/ml | 75 pg/ml | 4.6X | In vivo [ |
| IL-12 | Undetectable | 270 pg/ml | 270X | In vivo [ |
| IL-15 | 5.2 pg/ml | 12-31 pg/ml | 2-6X | In vivo [ |
| IFNα | <6 U/ml | 1600 U/ml | 267X | In vivo [ |
| IFNγ | <0.025 U/ml | 0.95 U/ml | 16X | In vivo [ |
| TNFα | 3 pg/ml | 210 pg/ml | 70X | In vivo [ |
| TNFβ | Undetectable | To 605 pg/ml | 600X | In vivo [ |
| GM-CSF | 0.2 pg/ml | 10.5 pg/ml | 53X | In vitro [ |
Figure 3Course of Dengue Fever, Markers, Grading, and Symptoms. (A) Laboratory diagnostic options in a patient with suspected dengue infection, (B) Progression from Dengue Fever to Dengue hemorrhagic fever (DHF) and (C) Timeline and course of clinical signs and symptoms of Dengue.
Tumor immune evasion mechanisms and DV infection
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| Low levels of MHC on tumor cell prevent CTL recognition [ | Hi Interferon-γ raises MHC levels by up-regulating MHC gene expression [ |
| Point mutations in Tumor Peptides prevent TCR binding [ | LAK/CIK cells target “escaped” tumor cells expressing aberrant peptides or MHC [ |
| Tumor vessels lack factors for CTL attachment and trafficking [ | Hi [TNF-a] restores gaps by altering PECAM-1, restores ICAM-1/VCAM-1 expression and P and E-selectins [ |
| FasL can kill Fas+ CTL by triggering apoptosis [ | Hi [IL-6, 15] protects Fas+ CTL by up-regulating FLIP ligand [ |
| HLA-G protects from NK Cells [ | Hi [IL-2,7,12,15 raise activation of NK [ |
| Stromal barriers inhibit CTL [ | Hi [IFN-γ] activates Macrophages to M1 [ |
| Myeloid-Derived Suppressor Cells, (MDSC) [ | iNKT Cells can decrease MDSC [ |
| CTL inactivated by TGF-β [ | TH1 cytokines reactivate tolerant CTL [ |
| Tumor PI-9 blocks CTL killing ([ | Hi [CD8] & ICAM-1 expression can restore low-avidity CTL recognition and lysis by stabilizing weak interactions between TCR and MHC + self-peptide [ |
| T-regulatory cells block CTL [ | Hi CD4Helper cells overcome CD4Reg cells [ |
Figure 4Mechanisms in protective T 1 responses and exacerbating T 2 responses.
Gene expression changes in DV infection
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| IL-1beta | IL-1β | Inflammation | 9.80 [ | Fever, Vascular permeability [ |
| Interleukin-2 | IL-2 | T cell growth | 3.97 [ | CTL growth, NK Activation [ |
| Interleukin-12 | CLMF/CLMF2 | Shift to TH1 Cytokines | 2.20 [ | TH1 cytokine storm [ |
| Interferon γ | IFNG | Up-regulate Class I MHC | 2.85 [ | CTL recognize HLA + peptide [ |
| CD8 antigen | CD8β1 | CTL Co-receptor | 5.74 [ | Stabilizes MHC-TCR bond [ |
| Inducible T cell co-stimulatory ligand | ICOSLG | Non-naïve T cell activation TH1 cytokines | 2.44 [ | Optimize response of CTL [ |
| Chemokine ligand 3 | CCL3 | T-cell activation Autoimmunity | 4.64 [ | Marker of vaccine response [ |
| Chemokine ligand 5 | CCL5 | T-cell localization | 7.33 [ | T-cell attraction to tumor area [ |
| TRAIL | TRAIL | Apoptosis Induction | 42.0 [ | Induces Apoptosis in Tumor Cells [ |
| Interferon-protein-10 | IP10 | T cell activation, Localization | 46.0 [ | Levels correlate w/clinical outcome in RCC [ |
| Granulysin | GNLY | Apoptosis Induction | 4.90 [ | Induces Apoptosis [ |
| Granzyme A | GZMA | Target cell lysis | 4.61 [ | Effector CTL [ |
| MHC class II DRα | HLA-DRA | Antigen Presentation | 7.26 [ | Antigen Presentation [ |
| MHC class II DPα1 | HLA-DPα1 | MHC peptide Display | 4.58 [ | Antigen (Ag) Presentation [ |
| MHC class I DPβ1 | HLA-DPβ1 | MHC peptide Display | 2.72 [ | Antigen Presentation [ |
| ζ chain kinase | ZAP70 | TCR signal transduction | 3.03 [ | Restores CTL signaling [ |
Markers of activated lymphocytes in DV infection [40]
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| CD8+ CD44+62 L− | 6.5 | 24 | 3.7 | Effector/memory set/Traffic to inflamed tissue |
| CD4+ CD44 + CD62LLO | 7.1 | 22.4 | 3.2 | Helper/Traffic to Inflamed Tissue |
| HLA-DR+ (CD8) | 5.8 | 12.5 | 2.2 | Activation Marker |
| Tia-1 (CD8) | 6.6 | 20.3 | 3.1 | Cytolytic effector |
| VLA-4 CD8) | 42.7 | 61.0 | 1.4 | CTL trafficking to inflamed sites |
| ICAM-1 (CD8) | 18.8 | 29.8 | 1.6 | Cell adhesion |
| LFA-1 (CD8) | 52.9 | 71.4 | 1.4 | Binds to ICAM-1 on target, co-stimulation |
Figure 5Representation of Apo2L/TRAIL apoptotic pathway and its relation to the NF-κβpathway. With permission from Springer Images for non-commercial use [86].
Figure 6H & E staining for Death Receptors DR4 and DR5, compared to Decoys DcR1 and DcR2. In primary epithelial cells (top row), staining of DR4/5 is greater then DcR1/2. In metastatic lesions, (bottom row), the relative expressions are reversed, conferring resistance to TRAIL-mediated apoptosis. With permission from Springer Images for non-commercial use [93].