| Literature DB >> 27437104 |
Marc Schwartz1, Yu Zhang2, Joseph D Rosenblatt2.
Abstract
The balance between immune effector cells such as T cells and natural killer cells, and immunosuppressive Treg cells, dendritic, myeloid and monocytic sub-populations in the tumor microenvironment acts to calibrate the immune response to malignant cells. Accumulating evidence is pointing to a role for B cells in modulating the immune response to both solid tumors and hematologic cancer. Evidence from murine autoimmune models has defined B regulatory cell (Breg) subsets that express cytokines such as IL-10, TGF-β, and/or express immune regulatory ligands such as PD-L1, which can suppress T cell and/or natural killer cell responses. Multiple murine tumor models exhibit decreased tumor growth in B cell deficient or B cell depleted mice. In several of these models, B cells inhibit T cell mediated tumor immunity and/or facilitate conversion of T cells to CD4(+)CD25(+)FoxP3(+) T regs, which act to attenuate the innate and/or adaptive antitumor immune response. Mechanisms of suppression include the acquisition of inhibitory ligand expression, and phosphorylation of Stat3, and induction of IL-10 and TGF-β, resulting in a Breg phenotype. Breg suppressive activity may affect diverse cell subtypes, including T effector cells, NK cells, myeloid derived suppressor cells (MDSC) and/or tumor associated macrophages. B cells may also directly promote tumorigenesis through recruitment of inflammatory cells, and upregulation of pro-angiogenic genes and pro-metastatic collagenases. Breg infiltration has now been identified in a variety of solid tumor malignancies including but not limited to ovarian, gastric, non-small cell lung cancer, pancreatic, esophageal, head and neck, and hepatocellular carcinomas. Increasing evidence suggests that recruitment of B cells and acquisition of suppressive activity within the tumor bed may be an important mechanism through which B cells may modulate innate and/or adaptive anti-tumor immunity. B cell depletion in the clinic using anti-CD20 antibodies and/or inhibitors of BTK and/or other signaling pathways, may be a useful strategy for augmenting the anti-tumor immune response.Entities:
Keywords: Anti-tumor immunity; B regulatory cells; Carcinogenesis
Year: 2016 PMID: 27437104 PMCID: PMC4950763 DOI: 10.1186/s40425-016-0145-x
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Immunother Cancer ISSN: 2051-1426 Impact factor: 13.751
Breg markers of immune suppression and tumorigenesis
| Breg marker | Mechanisms | Phenotype(s) | Cancer type(s) | References |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| IL-10 | ↓Th1/Th17; ↑Treg generation | Human: | HNSCC, lung, esophageal, ovarian, glioma, gastric | [ |
| CD19+CD24hiCD38hi | ||||
| CD19+CD1dhiCD5+ | ||||
| CD19+CD24hiCD27+ | ||||
| CD19+CD25hi | ||||
| Mouse: | ||||
| CD19+CD1dhiCD5+ | ||||
| CD19 + CD25 + B220+ | ||||
| Granzyme-B | ↓T cell proliferation via degradation of TCR-zeta chain | Human: | Breast, ovarian, cervical, colorectal, prostate | [ |
| CD19 + CD38 + CD1d + IgM + CD147+ | ||||
| IL-35 | ↓Th1/Th17; ↑Treg generation | Human: | Pancreatic | [ |
| CD19 + CD35+ | ||||
| Mouse: | ||||
| CD19+CD1dhiCD5+ | ||||
| TGFβ | ↑Treg generation | Human: | Multiple tumor types | [ |
| CD19+CD24hiCD38hi | ||||
| Mouse: | ||||
| CD19+CD25+B220+ | ||||
| Stat3 | ↑Treg generation; ↑angiogenesis | Human: | Melanoma, gastric, lung, liver, prostate | [ |
| CD5+ | ||||
| Mouse: | ||||
| ↑IL-10, ↑TGFβ | CD19+CD25+B220+ | |||
| Lymphotoxin-α/β | Activation of IKKα and STAT3 | Mouse: | Castration-resistant prostate (mice) | [ |
| CD19 + LT+ | ||||
| PD-L1 | Promote T cell anergy via interaction with PD1 | Human: | B cell lymphomas, prostate | [ |
| Malignant B cells | ||||
| IgA + CD138+ | ||||
| Mouse: | ||||
| IgA + CD138+ | ||||
| PD-1 | Promote T cell anergy | Human: | Hepatocellular | [ |
| CD19 + CD5hiCD24−/+CD27hi/+CD38dim | ||||
| TNFα | ↑IL-10+ Bregs, ↓CD8 + IFNγ Tcells | Mouse: | Squamous cell skin CA (mice) | [ |
| CD19 + TNFα+ | ||||
| OX40L | ↑Th2 skewing, ↓CD8 + IFNγ Tcells | Mouse: | Colorectal (mice) | [ |
| CD19 + OX40L+ | ||||
| CD80, CD86 | ↓T cell proliferation via interaction with CTLA-4; may also ↑T cell proliferation via interaction with CD28 | Human | Multiple tumor types | [ |
| CD19+CD24hiCD38hi | ||||
| IL-8 | Upregulation of androgen receptor and downstream MMPs | Human: | Bladder | [ |
| CD19 + IL-8+ | ||||
| FasL | Induce T cell apoptosis via binding to Fas | Human: | CLL | [ |
| Malignant B cells | ||||
| CD40L | Interact with CD40 on malignant cells to stimulate ↑IL-10, ↑TGFβ | Human: | Hepatocellular | [ |
| CD19+CD24hiCD38hi | ||||
| CD5 | Activation of Stat3 via binding to IL-6 | Human: | Lung, prostate | [ |
| CD19+CD5+IL-10+ | ||||
| BTK | Repolarization of macrophages toward M2-type | Mouse: | Pancreatic (mice) | [ |
| CD19 + BTK+ |
Fig. 1Tumor educated B regulatory cells suppress anti-tumor immunity. Tumor cell secreted chemokines such as CXCL13, may attract naïve B cells into the tumor microenvironment. Tumor cells and tumor infiltrating Treg cells may express inhibitory molecules (e.g. PD-L1) and/or secrete cytokines (e.g. IL-21, IL-35, or TGF-β) that may promote differentiation of B cells leading to development of a B regulatory phenotype (Breg cells). Breg cells may undergo activation of Stat3, and also upregulate key regulatory or inhibitory molecules such as PD-L1, CD25, CD86, LAP/TGF-β, and Granzyme B, and secrete cytokines, such as IL-10, IL-35 and TGF-β. Breg cells can suppress T and NK cell activation, proliferation and function in vivo and also ‘educate’ MDSC and tumor associated macrophages (TAM) to suppress anti-tumor immunity. Breg cells have also been noted to support natural Treg cell expansion and the conversion of effector CD4+ T cells into inducible Treg cells. Breg cells may also facilitate macrophage differentiation into TAM-M2 macrophages and increase local inflammation and thereby promote carcinogenesis in certain settings. Further details and supporting references in text