| Literature DB >> 26942080 |
Alessandra Dondero1, Fabio Pastorino2, Mariella Della Chiesa1, Maria Valeria Corrias2, Fabio Morandi2, Vito Pistoia2, Daniel Olive3, Francesca Bellora1, Franco Locatelli4, Aurora Castellano4, Lorenzo Moretta2, Alessandro Moretta5, Cristina Bottino6, Roberta Castriconi5.
Abstract
The prognosis of high-risk neuroblastoma (NB) remains poor, although immunotherapies with anti-GD2 antibodies have been reported to provide some benefit. Immunotherapies can be associated with an IFNγ storm that induces in tumor cells the "adaptive immune resistance" characterized by the de-novo expression of Programmed Death Ligands (PD-Ls). Tumor cells can also constitutively express PD-Ls in response to oncogenic signaling. Here, we analyze the constitutive and the inducible surface expression of PD-Ls in NB cells. We show that virtually all HLA class Ipos NB cell lines constitutively express PD-L1, whereas PD-L2 is rarely detected. IFNγ upregulates or induces PD-L1 both in NB cell lines in vitro and in NB engrafted nude/nude mice. Importantly, after IFNγ stimulation PD-L1 can be acquired by NB cell lines, as well as by metastatic neuroblasts isolated from bone marrow aspirates of high-risk NB patients, characterized by different MYCN amplification status. Interestingly, in one patient NB cells were poorly responsive to IFNγ stimulation, pointing out that responsiveness to IFNγ might represent a further element of heterogeneity in metastatic neuroblasts. Finally, we document the presence of lymphocytes expressing the PD-1 receptor in NB-infiltrated bone marrow of patients. PD-1pos cells are mainly represented by αβ T cells, but also include small populations of γδ T cells and NK cells. Moreover, PD-1pos T cells have a higher expression of activation markers. Overall, our data show that a PD-L1-mediated immune resistance mechanism occurs in metastatic neuroblasts and provide a biological rationale for blocking the PD-1/PD-Ls axis in future combined immunotherapeutic approaches.Entities:
Keywords: Anti-tumor immunity; INF-γ; PD-1; PD-L1; PD-L2; T cells; TNF-α; immune checkpoints; natural killer cells; neuroblastoma
Year: 2015 PMID: 26942080 PMCID: PMC4760291 DOI: 10.1080/2162402X.2015.1064578
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Oncoimmunology ISSN: 2162-4011 Impact factor: 8.110