| Literature DB >> 27349385 |
Laura Paladini1, Linda Fabris2, Giulia Bottai1, Carlotta Raschioni1, George A Calin3, Libero Santarpia4.
Abstract
The role of immune response is emerging as a key factor in the complex multistep process of cancer. Tumor microenvironment contains different types of immune cells, which contribute to regulate the fine balance between anti and protumor signals. In this context, mechanisms of crosstalk between cancer and immune cells remain to be extensively elucidated. Interestingly, microRNAs (miRNAs) have been demonstrated to function as crucial regulators of immune response in both physiological and pathological conditions. Specifically, different miRNAs have been reported to have a role in controlling the development and the functions of tumor-associated immune cells. This review aims to describe the most important miRNAs acting as critical modulators of immune response in the context of different solid tumors. In particular, we discuss recent studies that have demonstrated the existence of miRNA-mediated mechanisms regulating the recruitment and the activation status of specific tumor-associated immune cells in the tumor microenvironment. Moreover, various miRNAs have been found to target key cancer-related immune pathways, which concur to mediate the secretion of immunosuppressive or immunostimulating factors by cancer or immune cells. Modalities of miRNA exchange and miRNA-based delivery strategies are also discussed. Based on these findings, the modulation of individual or multiple miRNAs has the potential to enhance or inhibit specific immune subpopulations supporting antitumor immune responses, thus contributing to negatively affect tumorigenesis. New miRNA-based strategies can be developed for more effective immunotherapeutic interventions in cancer.Entities:
Keywords: Adaptive Immunity; Anticancer Immunotherapy; Cancer; Cancer-Related Immune Response; Immune System; Immune-related MicroRNAs; Innate Immunity; MicroRNAs
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2016 PMID: 27349385 PMCID: PMC4924278 DOI: 10.1186/s13046-016-0375-2
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Exp Clin Cancer Res ISSN: 0392-9078
MicroRNAs involved in Innate and Adaptive Immune System Functions
| Cell lineage | Cellular process | MicroRNAs | |
|---|---|---|---|
|
| |||
| Hematopoietic stem cells | Cell maintenance | let-7ea, miR-29a, miR-99ba, | |
| Multipotent progenitors | Cell development |
| |
| Common myeloid progenitors | Cell development |
| |
| Common lymphoid progenitors | Cell development | miR-126, miR-128, | |
| Granulocyte–macrophage progenitors | Cell development | miR-16, miR-103, miR-107 | |
| Macrophage progenitors | Cell development |
| |
| Granulocyte progenitors | Cell development |
| |
| Erythroid precursors | Cell development | miR-155, | |
| Megakaryocyte precursors | Cell development |
| |
|
| |||
| Monocytes | Cell differentiation |
| |
| Cell activation |
| ||
| Dendritic cells | Cell differentiation |
| |
| Cell function | miR-10a, miR-148/152 | ||
| Macrophages | Cell differentiation | miR-15a, miR-16, miR-19a-3p, | |
| Cell function |
| ||
| Cell polarization | let-7c, let-7f, miR-9, miR-21, miR-33, miR-101, miR-124, miR-125, miR-146, miR-147, miR-155, miR-187, miR-223, miR-342, miR-378, miR-511 | ||
| Granulocytes | Cell differentiation | miR-15a, miR-21, | |
| Cell function |
| ||
| Neutrophils | Cell function |
| |
| MDSCs | Cell function | miR-494, miR-17-5p/20a | |
| Megakaryocytes | Cell differentiation | miR-10a, miR-130a, miR-146a, | |
| Erythrocytes | Cell differentiation | miR-15a, miR-16, miR-24, miR-144, | |
| Natural killer cells | Cell differentiation |
| |
| Cell function | miR-15/16, miR-27a, miR-29, miR-30c-1, miR-30e, | ||
|
| |||
| B cells | Cell differentiation |
| |
| Cell activation | miR-9, | ||
| Plasma cells | Cell differentiation | miR-148a | |
| T cells | Cell differentiation |
| |
| Cell activation |
| ||
| T helper cells | Cell differentiation | miR-125b, | |
| Cell function | miR-182, miR-214, miR-297, miR-669c | ||
| T helper 1 cells | Cell differentiation | miR-17/92 cluster, miR-29, miR-146a, miR-148a, | |
| T helper 2 cells | Cell differentiation | miR-21, miR-27, miR-28 | |
| Cell function |
| ||
| T cytotoxic cells | Cell differentiation | Let-7f, miR-15b, miR-16, miR-17/92 cluster, miR-21, miR-139, miR-142, miR-150, miR-155, miR-342 | |
| Cell function |
| ||
| T regulatory cells | Cell differentiation | miR-17/92 cluster, miR-10, miR-99a/miR-150, | |
| Cell function |
| ||
| T helper 17 cells | Cell differentiation | miR-10a, miR-19b, miR-17, | |
| T follicular helper cells | Cell differentiation |
|
The most relevant miRNAs are in bold. MDSCs, Myeloid-Derived Suppressor Cells
aFurther investigations are required
Main deregulated microRNAs/targets, and the biological roles in immune- and cancer-related pathways in solid tumors
| Cancer type | miRNA | Expression status and cell localizationb | Target | Immune-related role | Cancer-related role | Refc |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Breast | ↑miR-10b | Cancer cells | ↓MICB | Suppression of NK-mediated killing of tumor cells | Metastasis developmentd | [ |
| ↑miR-19a-3p | M2 Macrophages | ↓FRA-1 | Macrophage polarization | Inhibition of cancer progression and metastasis development | [ | |
| ↑miR-21 | Cancer cells | ↓PIAS3 | Reduced chemokine production and lymphocyte migration, immunoresistance to cancer immunotherapyd | Cancer cell survival, cell proliferation | [ | |
| ↓miR-23a/ | Macrophages | ↑A20 | M2 Macrophage polarization | Xenograft tumor growth | [ | |
| ↓miR-126/126a | Cancer cells | ↑SDF-1α | Downregulation of Ccl2 expression, Suppression of Inflammatory monocyte recruitment | Repression of MSC recruitment, lung metastasis promotion | [ | |
| ↓miR-146a | Cancer cells | ↑IRAK1 ↑TRAF6 | Modulation of inflammationc | Cell Invasion and Migration impairment (NF-kB signaling block) | [ | |
| ↑miR-155 | Cancer cells | ↓SOCS1 | STAT3 signaling activation | Cancer cell proliferation, colony formation, and xenograft tumor growth | [ | |
| Myeloid cells | ↓SHIP1 | Tumor-infiltrating innate immune cell recruitment | Antitumor activity | [ | ||
| ↑miR-223a | M2 macrophages and cancer cells | ↓MEF2Cd | Macrophage differentiationd | Promotion of cancer cell invasion | [ | |
| ↑miR-494 | MDSCs | ↓PTEN | Accumulation of MDSCs | Tumor cell invasion and metastasis development | [ | |
| Gastric | ↓miR-146a | Cancer cells | ↑IRAK1 ↑TRAF6 | Modulation of inflammationd | Antitumor activity | [ |
| Ovarian | ↑miR-20a | Cancer cells | ↓MICA/B | Suppression of NK-mediated killing of tumor cells | Long-term cellular proliferation, invasion capabilities | [ |
| ↓miR-199a | Cancer cells | ↑IKKβ | Cytokine production | Tumor progression, chemosensitivity (NF-kB signaling modulation) | [ | |
| ↑miR-424 | Cancer cells | ↓PDL1 | T cell activation | Chemosensitivity | [ | |
| Colorectal | ↓miR-17-5p/miR-20a/miR-124 | MDSCs | ↑STAT3 | Inhibition of immunosuppressive potential of MDSCs | Tumor growth | [ |
| ↑miR-21/miR-29ba | Cancer cells and immune cells | ↑IL-6 (Indirectly) | Activation of pro inflammatory immune cellsd | Promotion of cancer cell invasion, tumor progressiond | [ | |
| Hepatocellular | ↑miR-20a, miR-96, miR-106b | Cancer cells | ↓MICA | Suppression of NK-mediated killing of tumor cells | Long-term cellular proliferation, invasion capabilitiesd | [ |
| HBV+/Hepatocellular | ↓miR-34a | Cancer cells | ↑CCL2 | Regulation of Treg recruitment | Suppression of tumor growth/metastasis development | [ |
| Melanoma | ↓miR-34a/c | Cancer cells | ↑ULPB2 | Suppression of NK-mediated killing of tumor cells | Cell cycle arrest, senescence, apoptosis | [ |
| ↓miR-17 | T cells | ↑STAT3 | Impairment of T cell responsed | Tumor growthd | [ | |
| Melanoma and Lewis lung cancer | ↓miR-155 | Immune cells | ↑HIF1a | Recruitment of MDSC cells to tumor microenvironment | Promotion of tumor growthd | [ |
| Lung | ↑miR-23a | T cells | ↓BLIMP1 | Suppression of CD8+ T cell functiond | Tumor progression, TGF-β-mediated immune evasiond | [ |
| Glioma | ↓miR-124 | T cells | ↑STAT3 | Impairment of T cell responses | Tumor growth | [ |
| Various solid tumors | ↓miR-29 | Cancer cells | ↑B7-H3 | Inhibition of NK and T cell functiond | Protumor activityd | [ |
| ↓miR-214a | Cancer cells and CD4+CD25+ T cells | ↓PTEN | Expansion of Treg cells | Promotion of tumor growth | [ |
a Detailed mechanism involving microvesicles-cell interactions (see also subsection “MicroRNAs and cell-to-cell communication”)
b These data are referred to studies in either tissue samples or in vitro/in vivo models
c Reference number listed in bibliography
d Further investigation is needed
Upregulation of miRNA or miRNA target. Downregulation of miRNA or miRNA target
HBV, Hepatitis B Virus; MDSCs, Myeloid-Derived Suppressor Cells; NKs, Natural Killer cells; TAMs, Tumor Associated Macrophages
Fig. 1Schematic representation of microRNA regulation in immune cell development and activity. MiRNAs have been demonstrated to function as important regulators of both innate and adaptive immunity, including differentiation and functions of different immune cell subsets. The most relevant miRNAs are included in the figure. The miRNAs in red boxes are involved in regulating the developmental transition indicated by the arrows, as well as the activity of cells in the immune system (full explanation in text). *MicroRNAs involved in negative regulation of immune cell development or function. HSC: Hematopoietic Stem Cell; CMP: Common Myeloid Progenitor; GMP: Granulocyte–Monocyte Progenitor; MEP: Megakaryocyte-Erythrocyte Progenitor; CLP: Common Lymphoid Progenitor; DC: Dendritic cell; aDC: activated Dendritic Cell; DN: Double Negative; DP: Double Positive; SP: Single Positive
Fig. 2Mechanisms of RNA transfer in cell-to-cell communication. Mechanisms underlying the transfer of RNA molecules between cells are mainly based on two systems, vesicle- and protein-mediated transport. (1,2,3) After exosome release from donor cell, RNA content is delivered into recipient cell by (1) the fusion of the exosome with the recipient cell membrane, by (2) phagocytosis- or (3) endocytosis-like internalization of the exosome. RNA molecules can be exported and transported out of the cells by microvesicles also as (4) shedding ectosomes or (5) apoptotic bodies. (6,7) Different protein complexes (violet boxes) including Argonaute, NPM1 and HDL proteins, bind miRNAs and are transferred out of the cell through (6) transporter-mediated release (ABCA1) and are translocated to target cell by (7) receptor-mediated uptake (SR-B1). All these pathways result in the delivery of microRNA or mRNA molecules to the cytosol of the recipient cell where they may contribute to post translational gene regulation. E: Endosome; EE: Early Endosome; G: Golgi; L: Lysosome; MVB: Multivesicular Bodies; N: Nucleus; P: Protein; UP: Undigested Protein
Fig. 3MicroRNA-based strategies for anti-cancer therapy. The main strategies for the modulation of miRNA activity are basically based on enhancing or inhibiting the expression of specific miRNAs with miRNA mimics (1) or miRNA antagonists (2), respectively. Modified miRNA molecules have been developed to increase the stability of miRNA mimics and miRNA antagonists, including miRNA mimics containing modified cyclopentyl-guanine based, cholesterol-conjugated 2′-O methyl-modified miRNA mimics/anti-miRs, locked nucleic acid (LNA)-modified anti-miRs and 2′-O-methoxyethyll-4′-thioRNA (MOE-SRNA). A different approach consists in miRNA sponges (3), which are complex constructs able to interfere with miRNA/mRNA interaction. Interference at miRNA biogenesis level is obtained with small-molecule inhibitors of miRNAs, SMIRs (4). Modified or unmodified miRNA modulators can be delivered to target cells by using viral (5) or non-viral vectors consisting in different types of biocompatible and biodegradable nanoparticles (6)