| Literature DB >> 26161391 |
Yasumitsu Nishimura1, Naoko Kumagai-Takei1, Hidenori Matsuzaki1, Suni Lee1, Megumi Maeda2, Takumi Kishimoto3, Kazuya Fukuoka4, Takashi Nakano5, Takemi Otsuki1.
Abstract
Malignant mesothelioma is caused by exposure to asbestos, which is known to have carcinogenic effects. However, the development of mesothelioma takes a long period and results from a low or intermediate dose of exposure. These findings have motivated us to investigate the immunological effects of asbestos exposure and analyze immune functions of patients with mesothelioma and pleural plaque, a sign of exposure to asbestos. Here, we review our knowledge concerning natural killer (NK) cells and cytotoxic T lymphocytes (CTL). NK cells showed impaired cytotoxicity with altered expression of activating receptors upon exposure to asbestos, while induction of granzyme(+) cells in CD8(+) lymphocytes was suppressed by asbestos exposure. It is interesting that a decrease in NKp46, a representative activating receptor, is common between NK cells in PBMC culture with asbestos and those of mesothelioma patients. Moreover, it was observed that CD8(+) lymphocytes may be stimulated by some kind of "nonself" cells in plaque-positive individuals and in mesothelioma patients, whereas CTL in mesothelioma is impaired by poststimulation maintenance of cytotoxicity. These findings suggest that analysis of immunological parameters might contribute to the evaluation of health conditions of asbestos-exposed individuals and to a greater understanding of the pathology of malignant mesothelioma.Entities:
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Year: 2015 PMID: 26161391 PMCID: PMC4486484 DOI: 10.1155/2015/238431
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Biomed Res Int Impact factor: 3.411
The major part of our previous studies about immunological effects of asbestos exposure and analysis for immune functions of patients.
| Analyses for | Asbestos in cultures or name of diseases | Results | References |
|---|---|---|---|
| (i) Natural killer (NK) cells | |||
| Human NK cell line, YT-A1 | Culture with chrysotile | Decreases in natural cytotoxicity, cell surface NKG2D, and 2B4 and phosphorylation of ERK | [ |
| Peripheral blood CD56+ NK cells | Malignant mesothelioma | Low cytotoxicity, low expression of cell surface NKp46 | [ |
| Human NK cells in PBMC | Culture with chrysotile | Decrease in cell surface NKp46 | [ |
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| (ii) T helper cells | |||
| Human T cell line, MT-2 | Culture with chrysotile | Resistance against asbestos-induced apoptosis, increases in secretion of IL-10 and expression of bcl-2 mRNA, decreases in secretion of IFN- | [ |
| Culture with crocidolite | Resistance against asbestos-induced apoptosis, increases in secretion of IL-10 and ratio of bcl-2/bax mRNAs, and decreases in secretion of IFN- | [ | |
| Peripheral blood CD4+ T cells | Malignant mesothelioma | Very low expression of cell surface CXCR3, low IFN- | [ |
| Pleural plaque | Low expression of cell surface CXCR3 | [ | |
| Isolated human CD4+ T cells | Culture with chrysotile | Decreases in cell surface CXCR3 and intracellular IFN- | [ |
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| (iii) Cytotoxic T lymphocytes (CTL) | |||
| Human CD8+ T cells in mixed lymphocyte reaction | Culture with chrysotile | Decreases in allogeneic cytotoxicity and intracellular IFN- | [ |
| Peripheral blood CD8+ T cells | Malignant mesothelioma | High percentage of perforin+ cells, stimulation-induced decrease in perforin+ cells | [ |
| Pleural plaque | High percentage of perforin+ cells | [ | |
Figure 1Possible effect of asbestos exposure on antitumor immunity. It is illustrated that there might be a suppressive effect of asbestos exposure on antitumor immunity in the pathology of tumor diseases caused by exposure to asbestos. It is well known that asbestos has a carcinogenic effect, but the development of malignant mesothelioma takes a long time after exposure to asbestos, suggesting the existence of effective antitumor immunity and subsequent impairment caused by asbestos exposure.
Figure 2NK cell activating receptors and signal transduction leading to killing targets. NK cells recognize target cells by various kinds of activating and inhibitory receptors. Activation uses common machinery that induces cytotoxicity for targets. The bindings of activating receptors with each ligand transduce through the Src family kinase- (SFK-) dependent phosphoinositide-3 kinase (PI3K) → extracellular signal-regulated kinase 2 (ERK2) pathway and the phospholipase Cγ→ c-Jun N-terminal kinase 1 (JNK1) pathway. Finally, degranulation is induced, by which perforin and granzymes in cytotoxic granules are released and work on target cells to induce apoptosis.
Figure 3The characteristic decrease of NKp46 on NK cells shared by in vitro asbestos exposure and malignant mesothelioma patients. Peripheral blood NK cells in 7 patients with malignant mesothelioma showed decreased cell surface NKp46, but not NKG2D or 2B4, among activating receptors, compared with 10 healthy individuals, and it is interesting that this was also shown by NK cells in PBMCs cultured with asbestos. The relative alterations of expression level are shown.
Figure 4Relationship among cytotoxicity, expression of NKp46 or NK2D, and ERK phosphorylation. When the NK cells of healthy individuals were analyzed, an individual with high cytotoxicity showed high expression of NKp46 and high phosphorylation of ERK induced through NKp46, and there was also a similar relationship among cytotoxicity, NKG2D expression, and ERK phosphorylation. These findings suggest that low expression of NKp46 may be attributed to decreased cytotoxicity of NK cells in patients with malignant mesothelioma. The levels in each individual relative to an individual with the highest cytotoxicity are shown.
Figure 5CTL function in patients with malignant mesothelioma and individuals positive for pleural plaque. Both 16 plaque-positive individuals and 14 mesothelioma patients showed a high percentage of perforin+ cells in CD8+ lymphocytes, compared with 16 healthy volunteers, whereas a decrease after stimulation was observed in mesothelioma. These findings indicate that CD8+ lymphocytes are stimulated by some kind of “nonself” cells in both plaque-positive individuals and mesothelioma patients, and that poststimulation maintenance of cytotoxicity is impaired in mesothelioma.
Figure 6Summary of our study results and discussions. It is illustrated that asbestos exposure may exert not only a carcinogenic effect, but also an immune-suppressive effect, and that there might be an interaction between antitumor immunity and “nonself” cells that results either in the successful removal of these cells or the development of tumor. Our study results are summarized below. Abbreviations: Perf, perforin; GranB, granzyme B.