| Literature DB >> 27471713 |
Abstract
Natural killer (NK) cells constitute a subtype of lymphocytes that initiate innate immune responses against tumors and virus-infected cells. The ability of NK cells to kill target cells or to produce cytokines depends on the balance between signals from activating and inhibitory cell-surface receptors. Therapies with NK cells involve activation of endogenous NK cells and/or exogenous transfer by hematopoietic stem cell transplantation/adoptive cell therapy. To exploit the diverse functional abilities of NK cells for cancer immunotherapy, it is important to understand NK cell biology and the underlying regulatory mechanisms. The state of immune suppression prevalent in malignancies creates the need for innovative therapies. Oncolytic viruses are novel anticancer agents showing selective tropism for tumor cells and lacking pathogenicity in humans, but the use of oncolytic virotherapy (OVT) presents multiple challenges. An increasing body of evidence suggests that the host immune response may critically influence the outcome of OVT. Classically, the immune system is thought to limit the efficacy of therapy through virus clearance mediated by innate immune effectors or through adaptive antiviral immune responses eliminating infected cells. Effective strategies do need to be designed in OVT to circumvent the early antiviral activity of NK cells and to augment late NK-cell-mediated antitumor responses. The intrinsic immunostimulating capacity of oncolytic viruses and the possibility of engineering them to express heterologous immunostimulatory molecules (eg, cytokines) support the use of these agents to enhance antitumor immune responses besides inducing direct oncolytic effects. OVT has indeed shown promising therapeutic outcomes in various clinical trials. Here, we review the biology of NK cells, strategies involving NK cells for achieving cancer therapy, and, more particularly, the emerging role of NK cells in OVT.Entities:
Keywords: natural killer cells; oncolytic virus; parvovirus; tumors; virotherapy
Year: 2015 PMID: 27471713 PMCID: PMC4918259 DOI: 10.2147/ITT.S55549
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Immunotargets Ther ISSN: 2253-1556
NK cell activatory and inhibitory receptors
| Receptor type | Ligands | Signal type | Species |
|---|---|---|---|
| KIRs | HLA-A-C | Human | |
| KIR2DL1 | HLA-C2 | Inhibitory | |
| KIR2DL2/3 | HLA-C1 | Inhibitory | |
| KIR2DL4 | HLA-G | Activatory | |
| KIR2DL5 | Unknown | Inhibitory | |
| KIR3DL1 | HLA-Bw4 | Inhibitory | |
| KIR3DL2 | HLA-A3, -A11 | Inhibitory | |
| KIR2DS1 | HLA-C2 | Activatory | |
| KIR2DS2 | HLA-C1 | Activatory | |
| KIR2DS3 | Potentially HLA-C | Activatory | |
| KIR2DS4 | HLA-Cw4 and HLA-11 | Activatory | |
| KIR2DS5 | Unknown | Activatory | |
| KIR3DS1 | HLA-Bw4 | Activatory | |
| Ly49 | MHC class I | Mouse | |
| Ly49A | H-2Dd,k,p | Inhibitory | |
| Ly49C | H-2Kb,d, H-2Db,d,k | Inhibitory | |
| Ly49D | H-2Dd | Activatory | |
| Ly49H | m157 | Activatory | |
| Ly49I | H-2K/Db,d,s,q,v | Inhibitory | |
| Ly49P | H-2Dd | Inhibitory | |
| CD94-NKG2 | Human: HLA-E | Human/mouse | |
| NKG2A | Inhibitory | ||
| NKG2C | Activatory | ||
| NKG2e | Activatory | ||
| NKG2D | Human: MIC-A/-B,ULBP1/2/3/4, RAe-1, MULT 1, H60 | Activatory | Human/mouse |
| NCRs | viral hemagglutinin | Human/mouse | |
| NKp30 | BAT-3, HSPG, B7-H6 | Activatory | |
| NKp44 | viral hemagglutinin | Activatory | |
| NKp46 | viral hemagglutinin, HSPG | Activatory | |
| NKp80 | AICL | Activatory | |
| LILR (ILT, LIR, CD85) | MHC class I, UL18 | Inhibitory | Human/mouse |
| 2B4 (CD244) | CD48 | Activatory/inhibitory | Human/mouse |
| KLRG1 | Cadherins | Inhibitory | Human/mouse |
| NKR-P1 | Ocil/Clr-b | Activatory/inhibitory | Mouse |
| PILR | CD99 | Activatory | Mouse |
| DNAM-1 | PVR | Activatory | Human/mouse |
| CeACAM1 | CeACAM1 | Inhibitory | Human/mouse |
| SIGLECC7/9 | Sialic acid | Inhibitory | Human |
| SIGLEC-E | Sialic acid | Inhibitory | Mouse |
Abbreviations: KIR, killer immunoglobulin-like receptor; RAE-1, retinoic acid early transcript-1; MULT 1, mouse UL16-binding-like transcript-1; NCR, natural cytotoxicity receptor; BAT-3, HLA-B-associated transcript 3; LILR, leukocyte immunoglobulin-like receptor; KLRG1, killer cell lectin-like receptor G1; CEACAM, carcinoembryonic antigen-related cell-adhesion molecule; PVR, polio virus receptor; NK, natural killer.
Figure 1Schematic presentation of the indirect immunostimulating effects of protoparvovirus H-1PV on human NK cells.
Notes: (A) H-1PV-infected pancreatic ductal adenocarcinoma (PDAC) and colon carcinoma cells were cocultivated with IL-2-stimulated NK cells. Contact with virus-infected tumor cells triggered NK cell activation, resulting in the production of cytokines and chemokines, including IFN-γ, TNF-α, and MIP1-α. This activation was traced back to the downregulation of MHCI (dotted circles) and an upregulation of NK-cell-activating ligands (stars). (B) Activated NK cells (E) showed a strikingly enhanced capacity for killing cocultured PDAC and colon carcinoma target cells (T). *P<0.05; **P<0.01.
Abbreviations: H-1PV, H-1 parvovirus; IL, interleukin; IFN, interferon; TNF, tumor necrosis factor; NK, natural killer; MIP1-α, macrophage inflammatory protein 1 alpha; KIRs, killer inhibitory receptors; NCRs, natural cytotoxicity receptors; DNAM-1, DNAX accessory molecule-1; NKG2D, natural-killer group 2, member D.
Figure 2Crosstalk between natural killer (NK) cells, dendritic cells (DCs), and tumor cells in oncolytic virotherapy (OVT).
Notes: Upon infection with oncolytic viruses (OVs), tumor cells produce viral and/or cellular ligands, triggering NK-cell-mediated cytotoxicity and secretion of cytokines, promoting DC maturation and tumor necrosis. In addition, OV infection and/or contact with OV-induced oncolysates triggers DC activation and antigen presentation, which can in turn lead to NK-cell activation through the secretion of cytokines.