Literature DB >> 28266500

Absence of PD-L1 on tumor cells is associated with reduced MHC I expression and PD-L1 expression increases in recurrent serous ovarian cancer.

Stefanie Aust1, Sophie Felix1, Katharina Auer1, Anna Bachmayr-Heyda1, Lukas Kenner2, Sabine Dekan2, Samuel M Meier3, Christopher Gerner3, Christoph Grimm1, Dietmar Pils4,5.   

Abstract

Immune-evasion and immune checkpoints are promising new therapeutic targets for several cancer entities. In ovarian cancer, the clinical role of programmed cell death receptor ligand 1 (PD-L1) expression as mechanism to escape immune recognition has not been clarified yet. We analyzed PD-L1 expression of primary ovarian and peritoneal tumor tissues together with several other parameters (whole transcriptomes of isolated tumor cells, local and systemic immune cells, systemic cytokines and metabolites) and compared PD-L1 expression between primary tumor and tumor recurrences. All expressed major histocompatibility complex (MHC) I genes were negatively correlated to PD-L1 abundances on tumor tissues, indicating two mutually exclusive immune-evasion mechanisms in ovarian cancer: either down-regulation of T-cell mediated immunity by PD-L1 expression or silencing of self-antigen presentation by down-regulation of the MHC I complex. In our cohort and in most of published evidences in ovarian cancer, low PD-L1 expression is associated with unfavorable outcome. Differences in immune cell populations, cytokines, and metabolites strengthen this picture and suggest the existence of concurrent pathways for progression of this disease. Furthermore, recurrences showed significantly increased PD-L1 expression compared to the primary tumors, supporting trials of checkpoint inhibition in the recurrent setting.

Entities:  

Mesh:

Substances:

Year:  2017        PMID: 28266500      PMCID: PMC5339797          DOI: 10.1038/srep42929

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Sci Rep        ISSN: 2045-2322            Impact factor:   4.379


Epithelial ovarian cancer (EOC) is a complex and therapeutically challenging malignancy, diagnosed with advanced disease and extensive peritoneal tumor spread in more than 70% of patients. Despite initial response to standard therapy (advanced surgery followed by platinum based chemotherapy) clinicians as well as patients have to face drug-resistance, early tumor-recurrence, extensive malignant ascites and a high mortality. New therapeutic approaches are urgently needed for advanced and recurrent EOC, especially for the two different types of high grade serous ovarian cancer, presenting with different modes of peritoneal tumor spread, miliary or non-miliary1234, which arise potentially from different origins, fallopian tubes or ovarian inclusion cysts15. The importance of the tumor immune microenvironment in EOC67 has been demonstrated in various trials evoking high expectations for tumor specific immunotherapy89. Cytotoxic T lymphocytes - key players in antitumor activity - are actively inhibited by immune checkpoint molecules. Up-regulation of programmed death-1 (PD-1) and its ligand PD-L1 mediates immune suppression by inactivating T lymphocytes together with multiple concurrent mechanisms10. Expression of PD-L1 is regulated by oncogenes and induced by various proinflammatory molecules in the tumor microenvironment11. Currently, promising activity of antibodies targeting PD-1 and PD-L1 across multiple malignancies12 raise expectations on the role of these agents also in EOC. But so far, clinical data on the effects of immune checkpoint inhibitors tested as single agents in relapsed EOC patients shows an overall response rate of maximum 15%131415. Combination with chemotherapy is under investigation in various trials but sufficient biological data is still missing to define patients amendable to immune checkpoint inhibitors. In order to evaluate if primary or recurrence would be equally eligible for PD-L1 targeted therapy, expression values were compared in tumor tissue acquired at the time of primary diagnosis versus tumor recurrence. Trying to understand biological and immunological processes associated with PD-L1 expression in serous EOC, whole sections from the ovarian tumor and from peritoneal implants were used to determine PD-L1 expression patterns and analyzed together with comprehensive cyto- and chemokine data, metabolomics, RNA sequencing data, and flow cytometric data.

Results

Expression patterns of PD-L1 in HGSOC tumor tissues – impact on survival

Complementing the data obtained from TMAs by Webb et al.16, analysis of whole tissue sections (WTSs) revealed that only very few EOC tumor cells express PD-L1. 24 WTSs from solid primary ovarian tumors (P) and 20 WTSs from metastatic implants (M) within the peritoneal cavity, mainly from tumors within the omentum majus, obtained from 28 patients were analyzed (Table 1). Both, P and M tumor tissues had the same focal staining pattern, whereby mainly tumor cells at the tumor-stroma border stained positively for PD-L1 (Fig. 1A). PD-L1 expression was almost exclusively observed on tumor cells with adjacent tumor infiltrating lymphocytes (TILs). A membranous +/− cytoplasmic staining was observed. Tumors were scored as PD-L1 positive if ≥1% of tumor cells within the whole tumor area stained positive for PD-L1.
Table 1

Characteristics of the HGSOC sample (n = 28); PD-L1 (%) indicates PL-L1 positive tumor cell abundance in %.

IDAge (yrs)FIGOGradeLNAscitesPD-L1 (%)
354IIICG3 >5005
580IIICG21<50010
670IIICG2 >5000
962IIICG2 >5005
1255IIICG31>5000
1360IIICG31>5000
1664IIICG3 >5000
2450IIIBG2 >5005
2550IIICG31>5000
2766IIIAG3005
2857IIICG3 <5001
2953IIICG30<5005
3041IIICG30<5005
3169IIIBG3 05
3556IIIBG3 05
3950IIICG3005
4149IICG30>5005
4249IIIBG30>5005
5348IIICG31020
5434IVG3 >5000
5581IIAG30<5000
5866IIICG3001
6050IIICG30>5005
6254IIICG31<5005
6544IIICG31>5005
8160IVG31<5005
8452IVG31>5000
8546IIICG3 <5000

LN, malignant lymph nodes.

Figure 1

(A) Immunohistochemistry (IHC) of PDL1, 100×: Tumor cells stain positively for PDL1 mainly at the tumor-stroma border. (B) IHC of PD1, 100×: At the tumor-stroma border clusters of immune cells and TILs with PD1 positive cytoplasmatic +/− membrane staining were observed. (C) IHC of CD8, 100×: CD8 positive TILs infiltrating the tumor. (D) The positive impact of PD-L1 expression (≥1% versus 0%) on overall survival (months) shown by a Kaplan-Meier estimate (y-axis is truncated to see the difference more pronounced; p = 0.045; Log-rank test).

Comparing the whole tumor areas within the WTSs of P and M revealed that 75% (n = 18 with the following percentage of positively stained tumor cells: 1%, n = 3; 5%, n = 13; 10%, n = 2) of the samples from the ovarian tumor were PD-L1 positive, compared to 40% (n = 8: 1%, n = 1; 5%, n = 6; 20%, n = 1) of the samples from metastatic implants (p = 0.019). Out of the 18 PD-L1 positive samples (P), the maximum of PD-L1 positive tumor cells was 10% (n = 2). Within the metastatic implants a maximum of 20% positive tumor cells was seen in one sample - the matched P tissue (Pat-ID 53, Table 1) had 10% PD-L1 positive tumor cells. In Fig. 1D a Kaplan-Meier estimate is shown indicating a positive impact of the PD-L1 abundance (≥1% versus 0%) on overall survival (p = 0.045; Log-rank test), albeit supported by only few samples but in accordance to most evidences in ovarian cancer1617 which is in discordance to the impact of PD-L1 expression on survival in nearly all other cancer entities including gastric cancer, hepatocellular carcinoma, renal cell carcinoma, esophageal cancer, pancreatic cancer, and bladder cancer18. The significant positive impact of PD-L1 expression holds also in a multiple Cox-regression analysis correcting individually for age (p = 0.049) and as a trend when correcting for residual tumor (p = 0.079).

TIL frequency correlates with PD-L1 expression

A significantly higher frequency of CD8+ TILs was seen in WTSs with PD-L1 expressing tumor cells, both in primary (p = 0.011; n = 24) and metastatic tumor tissues (p = 0.037; n = 20) (Suppl. Figure S1). Clusters of immune cells were frequently observed at the tumor-stroma border; clustering was also – but less frequently – seen directly within the tumor tissue. The only sample without CD8+ cell infiltration was a metastatic implant also negative for PD-L1 expressing tumor cells (Pat ID 85). 5 out of 44 WTSs were negative for PD-1 (one P and four M). All of them were also negative for PD-L1 expressing tumor cells. Among them was the one sample (M, Pat ID 85) also negative for CD8.

Expression analysis reveals three deregulated pathways in immune signaling

974 genes (thereof 708, 72.6%, protein coding) in isolated tumor cells were significantly (FDR 20%) correlated to the PD-L1 abundance, thereof 488 negatively and 486 positively. A KEGG pathway19 analysis of these differentially expressed genes using SPIA yielded three deregulated pathways (Table 2, Fig. 2A) namely (i) chemokine signaling pathway, (ii) cytokine-cytokine receptor interaction (Suppl. Fig. S2), and (iii) antigen processing and presentation (MHC I class, MHC II class) (Fig. 2B). The chemokine signaling pathway and the cytokine-cytokine receptor interaction pathway indicate a local immunological activation.
Table 2

Pathways significantly associated with PD-L1 expression in HGSOC tumor cells (FDR 20%).

NameID19pSizeNDEFDRStatus
Antigen processing and presentation46125760.1Activated
Cytokine-cytokine receptor interaction406019280.1Activated
Chemokine signaling pathway406215757.3Activated

Cf. Fig. 2A.

Figure 2

(A) Signaling Pathway Impact Analysis (SPIA) evidence plot (blue curve, FDR 10% cut-off; cf. Table 2) and (B) the KEGG pathway-plot for the “Antigen processing and presentation” pathway (ID 4612; color of nodes: red, positively correlated and green, negatively correlated to the PD-L1 abundance). (http://www.kegg.jp/kegg/kegg1.html 19).

In-detail analysis of the KEGG pathway MHC I + II class genes (112 HLA genes) showed that out of 19 reliably expressed coding genes, six differentially expressed genes were from the MHC I class path - all of them significantly positively correlated, and 13 were from the MHC II class path (six significantly positively correlated, 46%; Fig. 3). Out of eleven reliably expressed non-coding genes only one was significant (9%) (Suppl. Fig. S3). Significantly positively correlated genes of the MHC-I class path were HLA-A, HLA-B, HLA-C, HLA-E, HLA-F, HLA-G, and HLA-DMA and of the MHC-II class path HLA-DPA1, HLA-DPB1, HLA-DRA, HLA-DRB1, and HLA-DRB5 (Fig. 3). Additionally, the B2M gene – a component of the MHC-I class protein complexes, coded unlike the HLA protein genes on chromosome 15 – encoding for the β2-microglobulin protein, was also significantly positively correlated to PD-L1 expression (Fig. 3). Summarized, the expression of all expressed MHC I genes, including B2M, are significantly positively correlated to the PD-L1 abundance in tumor cells.
Figure 3

Association between PD-L1 expression (x-axis) and HLA-coding genes (y-axis).

Red boxplots indicate MHC I class protein-coding genes and orange boxplots MHC II class protein-coding genes. Red headings indicate significance (FDR < 20%).

Association between PD-L1 and systemic inflammatory processes

To determine the relationship between systemic inflammatory processes and tumor cell PD-L1 abundance, a quantitative analysis of serum cyto- and chemokines was performed. The first set of Luminex-panels revealed seven analytes positively (sHER2neu, CCL22, Leptin, sEGFR, GM-CSF, PECAM1, and MIF) and two analytes negatively (CCL23 and CXCL11) associated with PD-L1 expression (accepting an FDR of 20%) and the second set revealed three negatively associated cytokines (IL5, IL2R, and IL10) (cf. Materials and Methods, Table 3 and Suppl. Fig. S4).
Table 3

Cytokines and chemokines significantly associated with PD-L1 expression: serum HER-2/neu (sHER2neu), C-C chemokine ligand 22 (CCL22), soluble epidermal growth factor receptor (sEGFR), Granulocyte-macrophage colony-stimulating factor (GM-CSF), C-C chemokine ligand 23 (CCL23), platelet endothelial cell adhesion molecule (PECAM-1), C-X-C motif chemokine 11 (CXCL11), macrophage migration inhibitory factor (MIF), interleukin 5 (IL5), interleukin 2 receptor (IL2R), interalukin 10 (IL10).

IDlogFCAbundanceFDR
Set one
 sHER2neu0.1313.118.9
 CCL220.179.569.6
 Leptin0.5212.459.6
 sEGFR0.1314.779.6
 GM-CSF0.275.839.6
 CCL23−0.198.509.6
 PECAM-10.0711.809.6
 CXCL11−0.245.7814.8
 MIF0.4511.1717.8
Set two
 IL5−0.281.7212.7
 IL2R−0.328.2712.8
 IL10−0.362.8412.8

LogFC, log2 fold change correlating with log2 PD-L1 abundance values; Abundance, mean log2 abundance in serum; FDR, false discovery rate (%).

PD-L1 associated with immune cell populations determined by flow cytometry

Correlating PD-L1 abundance with flow-cytometric data obtained from EpCAM depleted EOC tumor tissue cells allows a better understanding of associated local immunological players. As shown in Fig. 4, PD-L1 abundance was positively associated with tumor associated B-cells (comprising naïve and memory B-cells) and negatively with CD56 positive NK cells including different sub-populations (NK1 and NK2, for details see Auer et al.3). This underlines the suppression of anti-tumor NK cells in response to PD-L1 expression. All other analyzed immune cell populations3 were not significantly associated with PD-L1 expression (data not shown).
Figure 4

Association of PD-L1 tumor cell abundances and immune cell populations in tumor tissues and blood determined by flow cytometry.

In tumor tissues B-cells (comprising naïve and memory B-cells) showed a positive and CD56 positive NK cells including different sub-populations (NK1 and NK2) a negative association. In blood, regulatory T-cells and memory B-cells showed a positive and HLA-DR positive NK4 cells a negative correlation. (“a.” before the cell population name means absolute values, otherwise relative frequencies; y-axis, negative log10 p-values – if positive, a positive correlation, if negative, a negative correlation is indicated.

A similar analysis of systemic immune cell populations in blood revealed regulatory T-cells (Treg) and memory B-cells positively and HLA-DR positive NK4 cells negatively associated with PD-L1 abundances on tumor cells. Analysis of immune cell populations3 in ascites revealed no significant associations with PD-L1 expression in EOC tumor tissue (data not shown).

Correlation of PD-L1 expression with serum metabolites

A targeted and integrative serum metabolomics approach (Bachmayr-Heyda & Aust et al.20) with PD-L1 tumor cell expression in 19 primary and 17 metastatic tumor tissues of 22 patients as outcome revealed 65 out of 182 serum metabolites as significantly (FDR 5%) associated with PD-L1 abundance, thereof 56 glycerophosphilipids, four sphingolipids, three amino acids (his, trp, and tyr; the former two essential proteinogenic amino acids), and two biogenic amines (ADMA and putrescine). All–except the two latter biogenic amines–were positively correlated. Interestingly, these metabolites were highly overlapping (37 out of 65 significantly associated metabolites overlapped with the 54 significantly with OS associated metabolites from the OS metabolomics study20, p = 3.6 10−9, Suppl. Fig. S5) especially the glycerophospholipids (32 out of 65 overlapping with 43 from the OS metabolomics study) and amino acids (two out of three overlapping with four from the OS metabolomics study).

PD-L1 in primary versus recurrent EOC

The use of TMAs to analyze PD-L1 expression in EOC has been previously published17 and allows a homogenous staining procedure. PD-L1 status shows a good concordance between small biopsies and resected specimens21; still, compared to WTSs only a small tumor area can be analyzed, this has to be considered as a limitation of the following analysis. Among the different ovarian cancer histologies (Table 4), PD-L1 expression was observed in 21% (n = 8) and 15% (n = 5) in primary tissue (P) and metastatic implants (I), respectively, whereby percentage of PD-L1 positive tumor cells did not exceed 10%. In recurrence (RI), a total of 19 samples (39%) showed PD-L1 expression. Percentage of PD-L1 positive tumor cells reached up to 80% but only in one non-serous sample (RI). In the population of patients with a second recurrence (RII), 46% (n = 6) showed PD-L1 expression (with a maximum of 15% positive tumor cells).
Table 4

Clinical characteristics of patients receiving surgery at tumor recurrence.

Primary tumor (n = 46)
Characteristicsn (%)Characteristicsn (%)
Histology Grade 
Serous37 (80)Grade 111 (24)
Non-serous9 (20)Grade 212 (26)
Residual tumor Grade 323 (50)
no39 (85)FIGO 
>1 cm7 (15)I2 (4)
Response* II7 (15)
CR40 (87)III32 (70)
PR5 (13)IV5 (11)
Recurrence I (n = 49)Recurrence II (n = 13)
Histology Histology 
Serous40 (82)Serous9 (89)
Non-serous9 (18)Non-serous4 (31)

In some cases surgery of primary or first tumor recurrence was executed in external hospitals, therefore tissue samples were not available. Only data of patients included in the TMA analyses are shown.

*CR, complete response; PR, partial response; one missing.

PD-L1 abundance increases in recurrence in serous EOC

A steady and significant increase of PD-L1 abundance was seen in recurrence II (RII) compared to recurrence I (RI) and to primary tumors (P) in serous EOC as shown in Fig. 5A (p = 0.024). Out of the six samples positive in the primary tumor, five remained also positive in RI. As the origin of the recurrences is unknown, arising either from the ovarian tumor mass or the peritoneal implants, steady increasing PD-L1 abundance was also observed comparing RII to RI and to peritoneal implants (I, “metastasis”; p = 0.020; Fig. 5A). Taken together, in the subset of serous EOC, PD-L1 expression was seen in 19.4% (n = 6; maximum 10% positive tumor cells), 17.9% (n = 5; maximum 10% positive tumor cells), 37.5% (n = 15; maximum 30% positive tumor cells), and 55.6% (n = 5, with up to 15% positive tumor cells), in P, I, RI, and RII, respectively.
Figure 5

Course of PD-L1 expression in serous EOC comparing (A) primary tumor tissues of the ovary (P) or metastatic peritoneal implants (I) to tumor recurrences (first recurrence, RI or second recurrence, RII) (y-axis, ratio of positive cases) and (B) a scheme showing the course of PD-L1 abundances of all samples individually, connected if samples are from the same patient (blue circles represent relative frequencies at each position).

PD-1 in primary versus recurrent serous EOC

Comparing PD-1 expression on TILs between P, RI, and RII serous EOC showed a slight but not significant increase (68.7% vs 71,1% vs 80.0%, respectively; p = 0.537) the same was seen comparing I to RI and RII (data not shown).

Discussion

Our study revealed a significant positive association between PD-L1 abundances and the expressions of MHC I genes in tumor cells of high grade serous ovarian cancer. Therefore, we propose two different strategies of immune-evasion in HGSOC, either the upregulation of PD-L1 on tumor cells to inhibit T-cell cytotoxic activity or the down-regulation of MHC I aiming to avoid antigen presentation and thus T-cell recognition. The latter accompanied by a more malignant phenotype with worse overall survival. Additionally, this is the first study comparing PD-L1 expression in primary versus recurrent tumor tissues of serous EOC, showing a significantly increased expression of PD-L1 in tumor recurrences. In our study, all expressed MHC I genes, i.e. HLA-A, HLA-B, HLA-C, HLA-E, HLA-F, HLA-G, HLA-DMA, and also B2M, were significantly positively correlated to PD-L1 expression. This data reflects the diversity in immune escape mechanisms in EOC in a selected population of only advanced stage HGSOC patients. Antigen presentation by human leukocyte antigen (HLA) molecules is required for detection and fighting of cancer cells by cytotoxic T-cells. Downregulation of HLA class I expression is a common immune-escape mechanism of tumor cells22. Tumors undergo a CD8+ T-cell mediated selection process and a down-regulation of MHC I expression in advanced stages23 – in EOC we see two parallel and mutually exclusive ways of immune escape: we hypothesize that EOC tumor cells are either (i) activating the immune regulatory mechanism of PD-L1 expression to inhibit T cell receptor signaling or (ii) down-regulate MHC I molecules as seen in PD-L1 negative tumor tissues so that the immune system lacks an initiating signal (tumor-associated antigens). In MHC class I positive tumors a higher density of CD8+ T-cell infiltration was already described24 and correspondingly we also observed a higher number of CD8+ T-cells in PD-L1 positive tumors. Both, PD-L1 expression but also a high degree of tumor infiltrating cytotoxic cells are considered positive prognostic factors in EOC716. High CD8+ cell infiltration might trigger PD-L1 expression on tumor cells as an immune escape mechanism during cancer progression and evolution. As a result, PD-1 expressing CD8+ cells loose functional antitumor activity16 – therefore CD8 positive cells as potential prognostic biomarker need to be further characterized to truly understand their positive prognostic impact. We found PD-1 positive TILs in all samples with PD-L1 positive tumor cells. Absence of PD-1 positive TILs was only observed in PD-L1 negative tumor tissues. PD-L1 abundance was not only positively associated with CD8+ T-cell but also with B-cell tumor-infiltration. In blood, also regulatory T-cells were positively associated with high PD-L1 tumor cell abundances, indicating a systemic down-regulation of T-cell mediated immunity. PD-L1 tumor abundance was negatively correlated with the serum cytokine IL10 and positively correlated with CCL22. IL10 suppresses proinflammatory cytokine secretion, antigen presentation and CD4+ T cell activation and CCL22 is associated with regulatory T-cell migration in ovarian cancer. A negative association of PD-L1 abundance with (specific) NK cells was not only seen in in tumor tissues but also systemically in blood. Although NK cells seem to have limited effects in established solid tumors25, they are interesting targets of adoptive immunotherapy as they have the ability to interact with tumor cells that express very low levels of MHC I2627. Thus, adoptive NK cell immunotherapy might be interesting for a selected population of patients with PD-L1 negative EOC tissues – probably less responsive for checkpoint inhibitors? Still, this approach has to be considered with caution as the only clinical trial on NK cell therapy revealed severe toxicities28. In a previous study20 we showed that especially (poly)unsaturated glycerophospholipids in serum were associated positively with (i) favorable survival, (ii) corresponding concentrations in ascites and tumor tissues, (iii) respiratory chain gene expressions, and (iv) histones expressions and negatively (v) with systemic inflammation and vi) fatty acid neosynthesis. Most striking was the positive correlation with the expression of many of the histones genes, which were themselves significantly positively correlated to the number of expressed genes and transcriptional noise. We interpreted this “many-genes-expressed” phenotype as a putative neo-pluripotent state of the tumor cells, granting the tumor a highly malignant phenotype with unfavorable overall survival. Correlating these results to the PD-L1 and MHC I expression levels shown in this study reveals the following picture: Tumors with this neo-pluripotent malignant phenotype are MHC I low expressing tumors thus escaping the adaptive immune reaction by down-regulation of antigen presentation. This data shows, in accordance with a previously published review29, that targeting immune-escape mechanisms is complex and various pathways have to be considered simultaneously. Comparing primary tumor tissue from the primary tumor (ovary) to tumor tissues acquired in the setting of tumor recurrence (or consecutive recurrences) revealed a significant increase of PD-L1 in relapsed serous EOC (p = 0.024). Since tumor tissues from relapsed EOC were taken from various sites we also compared them to metastatic implants within the peritoneal cavity, revealing a similar significant increase in PD-L1 expression (p = 0.020). Although this data was acquired in a small patient population and although PD-L1 expression on tumor cells seems to be not a reliable predictive marker of response to checkpoint inhibitors yet15, we could show that in EOC both, MHC I down-regulation and PD-L1 expression need to be considered concurrently.

Conclusion

The immune-suppressive function of the PD-1/PD-L1 immune checkpoint pathway emerges as a promising oncologic target in a variety of cancer types. The heterogeneity between tumor entities as well as the heterogeneity seen within one tumor type consequently results in different response patterns. Inevitably, the clinical challenge remains again in overcoming temptation to draw premature conclusions as data obtained within different cancer types might not apply for all tumor entities. In EOC we still need to define criteria to guide patient selection for PD-L1 therapy.

Material and Methods

Study population and tumor tissues

To perform a deep analysis of PD-L1 expression and associated biological processes, a previously described and extensively analyzed prospectively collected cohort of 28 HGSOC patients with available gene expression data was used234. Ascites, fresh and FFPE tumor tissues, and blood were available for further analyses (summarized in Table 1). Paired whole tissue sections (WTS) from ovarian tumor tissue (P, for “primary”) and from metastatic implants within the peritoneal cavity (M, for “metastasis”) were employed for immunohistochemistry (IHC). Gene expression data obtained from matched isolated and EpCAM enriched tumor cells from fresh tumor tissues was correlated to PD-L1 abundances on corresponding FFPE slides. To evaluate PD-L1 abundance in primary versus recurrent EOC, a second patient cohort was employed including only EOC patients undergoing surgery at tumor recurrence at the Medical University of Vienna between 1995 and 2015. In total, 64 patients with a median age at diagnosis of 55 years (range 24–82 yrs) were included in the final analyses (Table 4). Some patients underwent primary cytoreductive surgery in external hospitals. In these cases, only clinical data but no tissue samples from primary surgery were available. Retrospectively, FFPE tissues were collected from the time of tumor recurrence (first recurrence RI, n = 49; second recurrence RII, n = 13) as well as the time of primary surgery (P, n = 46). Samples from patients who received neoadjuvant chemotherapy prior to primary surgery were excluded. Paired samples with tumor tissues from primary tumor and recurrence were available from 31 patients and thereof matched samples from a second recurrence were available in seven patients. Comparison of PD-L1, PD-1, and CD8 expression was performed using tissue microarrays (TMAs), constructed according to standard procedures comprised of three one millimeter cores per tumor tissue. Approval for this study was obtained by the ethical review board of the Medical University of Vienna (nos 366/2003 and 793/2011) and all patients signed an informed consent. All experiments were conducted according to the “Good Scientific Practice” guidelines from the Medical University of Vienna, Version 2, 2012.

Immunohistochemistry

Staining was performed using a validated anti-PD-L1 antibody (PD-L1 clone E1L3N XP® Rabbit mAb, Cell Signaling Technology, Danvers, MA, USA). This antibody had already been used successfully with EOC tissues16, showing more reliable results compared to previously described anti-PD-L1 antibodies1730. To test the accuracy of this specific PD-L1 antibody, a second antibody (VENTANA PD-L1 (SP263) Rabbit Monoclonal Primary Antibody) was used on two different test slides showing a highly similar staining pattern. Additionally, staining for PD-1 (Fig. 1B) and CD8 (Fig. 1C) was performed using the monoclonal mouse anti-PD-1 antibody (MRQ-22) from Cell Marque and the anti-CD8 monoclonal mouse antibody (Clone C8/144B) from Dako7. IHC was performed in a standardized setting using the Leica bond Polymer Refine Detection kit DS9800 according to staining procedures established at the Department of Pathology, Medical University of Vienna. PD-L1 expression of EOC tumor cells and tumor infiltrating lymphocytes (TILs) was evaluated. Percentage of the lymphocyte subset of CD8+ TILs and percentage of PD-1 positive lymphocytes of total CD8+ cells were analyzed. All quantitative assessments were done by two trained IHC analysts and discordant estimates resolved together.

Luminex analyses

Cyto- and Chemokine analysis was performed using Luminex technology on a Bio-Plex 200 System (Bio-Rad Laboratories, Hercules, California, USA) in serum and cell-free ascites of the 28 HGSOC patients using a set (set one) of two Multiplexed Luminex-based assay panels (Bio-Plex Pro Human Cancer Biomarker Assays: Panel 1, and Bio-Plex Pro Human Chemokine Panel Assay; Bio-Rad Laboratories), and (set two) the Cytokine Human Magnetic 25-Plex Panel; Life Technologies. Luminex analyses were performed as previously described331. Cyto- and chemokine concentrations in serum and ascites were compared to logarithmized PD-L1 abundances in primary and metastatic tumor tissues using Bioconductor’s R-package limma v3.28.17 with its lmFit and eBayes (trend = TRUE) functions and tissue origin (P or M) as correcting factor32. A false discovery rate (FDR) cut-off of 20% was used.

Flow cytometric analysis

Immune cell compositions of digested and tumor cell depleted fresh tumor tissues, serum, and cell-free ascites were estimated using two six-color flow cytometric staining panels on a BD FACSVerse flow cytometer, equipped with three lasers (405 nm, 488 nm, and 633 nm) as described in Auer et al.3. Analysis was performed using FlowJo software (v7.6.2, Tree Star, Inc., Ashland, OR, USA). 26 different cell populations were quantified, including: CD3+ lymphocytes, separated (gated) into cytotoxic T-cells (CD8+), T-helper cells (Th, CD4+), regulatory T-cells (Tregs) and natural killer T-cells (NKT, HLA-DR+/−). CD3- lymphocytes were gated into B-cells (CD19+, naïve and memory), natural killer (NK) cells (CD56+), and five different subsets of NK cells (each HLA-DR+/−. Cell numbers are given as relative frequencies and absolute values (if possible; named “a …”). For further details see Auer et al.3. In total, 43 relative and absolute immune cell frequencies were compared to logarithmized PD-L1 abundances as described in the Luminex analyses section.

Metabolomics

Targeted metabolomics in serum was performed using AbsoluteIDQ p180 kits (Biocrates Life Sciences AG, Innsbruck, Austria)20. The kit allows the identification and (semi-) quantification of metabolites by liquid chromatography (LC)- and flow injection analysis (FIA)-multiple reaction monitoring (MRM). The samples were analyzed on an AB SCIEX QTrap 4000 mass spectrometer (Framingham, MA, USA) using an Agilent 1200 RR HPLC system (Agilent Technologies, Santa Clara, CA, USA), which were operated with Analyst 1.6.2 (AB SCIEX). The chromatographic column was obtained from Biocrates. The serum samples and additional blanks, calibration standards and quality controls were prepared according to the user manual. All amino acids and biogenic amines were derivatized with phenylisothiocyanate. The experiments were validated using the supplied software (MetIDQ, Version 5-4-8-DB100-Boron-2607, Biocrates). Metabolite concentrations were compared to PD-L1 abundances as described in the Luminex analyses section. A false discovery rate (FDR) cut-off of 5% was used.

RNA sequencing

rRNA depleted total RNA from 17 tumor cell enriched tissue samples (ovarian and peritoneal masses) from 15 patients were sequenced to a median depth of 26.03 million 50 bp paired-end reads (range: 10.67–44.65 million). Fresh tumor tissue was enzymatically digested and enriched for EpCAM positivity to receive a single-tumor cell-suspension with only minimal contamination by immune cells and stromal cells. Sequencing details are already described in Auer et al.2. Raw read counts were cyclic-loess normalized and genes’ and samples’ weights calculated by the voomWithQualityWeights function from the limma Biconductor-package33. Comparing gene expression from solid tumors from the ovary (P, n = 9) and implants from the peritoneum (M, n = 8) revealed no significant difference, therefore P and M samples were analyzed together but in the design model accounted for. The dependent variable was the logarithmized PD-L1 abundance. A false discovery rate (FDR) cut-off of 20% was used.

Additional Information

How to cite this article: Aust, S. et al. Absence of PD-L1 on tumor cells is associated with reduced MHC I expression and PD-L1 expression increases in recurrent serous ovarian cancer. Sci. Rep. 7, 42929; doi: 10.1038/srep42929 (2017). Publisher's note: Springer Nature remains neutral with regard to jurisdictional claims in published maps and institutional affiliations.
  33 in total

1.  Integrative Systemic and Local Metabolomics with Impact on Survival in High-Grade Serous Ovarian Cancer.

Authors:  Anna Bachmayr-Heyda; Stefanie Aust; Katharina Auer; Samuel M Meier; Klaus G Schmetterer; Sabine Dekan; Christopher Gerner; Dietmar Pils
Journal:  Clin Cancer Res       Date:  2016-10-19       Impact factor: 12.531

2.  Safety and Antitumor Activity of Anti-PD-1 Antibody, Nivolumab, in Patients With Platinum-Resistant Ovarian Cancer.

Authors:  Junzo Hamanishi; Masaki Mandai; Takafumi Ikeda; Manabu Minami; Atsushi Kawaguchi; Toshinori Murayama; Masashi Kanai; Yukiko Mori; Shigemi Matsumoto; Shunsuke Chikuma; Noriomi Matsumura; Kaoru Abiko; Tsukasa Baba; Ken Yamaguchi; Akihiko Ueda; Yuko Hosoe; Satoshi Morita; Masayuki Yokode; Akira Shimizu; Tasuku Honjo; Ikuo Konishi
Journal:  J Clin Oncol       Date:  2015-09-08       Impact factor: 44.544

Review 3.  Tumor microenvironment: The culprit for ovarian cancer metastasis?

Authors:  Zhongyue Luo; Qiu Wang; Wayne Bond Lau; Bonnie Lau; Lian Xu; Linjie Zhao; Huiliang Yang; Min Feng; Yu Xuan; Yanfei Yang; Lingzi Lei; Chenlu Wang; Tao Yi; Xia Zhao; Yuquan Wei; Shengtao Zhou
Journal:  Cancer Lett       Date:  2016-04-27       Impact factor: 8.679

Review 4.  The programmed death-1 immune-suppressive pathway: barrier to antitumor immunity.

Authors:  Suzanne Ostrand-Rosenberg; Lucas A Horn; Samuel T Haile
Journal:  J Immunol       Date:  2014-10-15       Impact factor: 5.422

5.  Intratumoral T cells, recurrence, and survival in epithelial ovarian cancer.

Authors:  Lin Zhang; Jose R Conejo-Garcia; Dionyssios Katsaros; Phyllis A Gimotty; Marco Massobrio; Giorgia Regnani; Antonis Makrigiannakis; Heidi Gray; Katia Schlienger; Michael N Liebman; Stephen C Rubin; George Coukos
Journal:  N Engl J Med       Date:  2003-01-16       Impact factor: 91.245

6.  Prognostic impact of programmed cell death-1 (PD-1) and PD-ligand 1 (PD-L1) expression in cancer cells and tumor-infiltrating lymphocytes in ovarian high grade serous carcinoma.

Authors:  Silvia Darb-Esfahani; Catarina Alisa Kunze; Hagen Kulbe; Jalid Sehouli; Stephan Wienert; Judith Lindner; Jan Budczies; Michael Bockmayr; Manfred Dietel; Carsten Denkert; Ioana Braicu; Korinna Jöhrens
Journal:  Oncotarget       Date:  2016-01-12

7.  Comparative transcriptome analysis links distinct peritoneal tumor spread types, miliary and non-miliary, with putative origin, tubes and ovaries, in high grade serous ovarian cancer.

Authors:  Katharina Auer; Anna Bachmayr-Heyda; Stefanie Aust; Thomas W Grunt; Dietmar Pils
Journal:  Cancer Lett       Date:  2016-12-07       Impact factor: 8.679

Review 8.  Adoptive immunotherapy against ovarian cancer.

Authors:  Gloria Mittica; Sonia Capellero; Sofia Genta; Celeste Cagnazzo; Massimo Aglietta; Dario Sangiolo; Giorgio Valabrega
Journal:  J Ovarian Res       Date:  2016-05-17       Impact factor: 4.234

Review 9.  PD-L1 expression in human cancers and its association with clinical outcomes.

Authors:  Xin Wang; Feifei Teng; Li Kong; Jinming Yu
Journal:  Onco Targets Ther       Date:  2016-08-12       Impact factor: 4.147

Review 10.  Immune Checkpoint Inhibitors: A New Opportunity in the Treatment of Ovarian Cancer?

Authors:  Gloria Mittica; Sofia Genta; Massimo Aglietta; Giorgio Valabrega
Journal:  Int J Mol Sci       Date:  2016-07-20       Impact factor: 5.923

View more
  21 in total

1.  Contribution of NK cells to immunotherapy mediated by PD-1/PD-L1 blockade.

Authors:  Joy Hsu; Jonathan J Hodgins; Malvika Marathe; Chris J Nicolai; Marie-Claude Bourgeois-Daigneault; Troy N Trevino; Camillia S Azimi; Amit K Scheer; Haley E Randolph; Thornton W Thompson; Lily Zhang; Alexandre Iannello; Nikhita Mathur; Karen E Jardine; Georgia A Kirn; John C Bell; Michael W McBurney; David H Raulet; Michele Ardolino
Journal:  J Clin Invest       Date:  2018-09-10       Impact factor: 14.808

Review 2.  Emerging role of circulating tumor cells in immunotherapy.

Authors:  Alexey Rzhevskiy; Alina Kapitannikova; Polina Malinina; Arthur Volovetsky; Hamidreza Aboulkheyr Es; Arutha Kulasinghe; Jean Paul Thiery; Anna Maslennikova; Andrei V Zvyagin; Majid Ebrahimi Warkiani
Journal:  Theranostics       Date:  2021-07-06       Impact factor: 11.556

3.  Changes in the tumor immune microenvironment in resected recurrent soft tissue sarcomas.

Authors:  Biqiang Zheng; Jian Wang; Weiluo Cai; Iweng Lao; Yingqiang Shi; Xiaoying Luo; Wangjun Yan
Journal:  Ann Transl Med       Date:  2019-08

Review 4.  Programmed death-1 pathway blockade produces a synergistic antitumor effect: combined application in ovarian cancer.

Authors:  Xinxin Zhu; Jinghe Lang
Journal:  J Gynecol Oncol       Date:  2017-06-05       Impact factor: 4.401

Review 5.  PD-1/PD-L1 Blockade Therapy for Tumors with Downregulated MHC Class I Expression.

Authors:  Michal Šmahel
Journal:  Int J Mol Sci       Date:  2017-06-21       Impact factor: 5.923

6.  HLA class I loss and PD-L1 expression in lung cancer: impact on T-cell infiltration and immune escape.

Authors:  Francisco Perea; Abel Sánchez-Palencia; Mercedes Gómez-Morales; Mónica Bernal; Ángel Concha; Míguela Méndez García; Amanda Rocío González-Ramírez; Martin Kerick; Javier Martin; Federico Garrido; Francisco Ruiz-Cabello; Natalia Aptsiauri
Journal:  Oncotarget       Date:  2017-12-19

7.  Clinical Significance of Organic Anion Transporting Polypeptide Gene Expression in High-Grade Serous Ovarian Cancer.

Authors:  Martin Svoboda; Felicitas Mungenast; Andreas Gleiss; Ignace Vergote; Adriaan Vanderstichele; Jalid Sehouli; Elena Braicu; Sven Mahner; Walter Jäger; Diana Mechtcheriakova; Dan Cacsire-Tong; Robert Zeillinger; Theresia Thalhammer; Dietmar Pils
Journal:  Front Pharmacol       Date:  2018-08-07       Impact factor: 5.810

8.  NECTIN4 (PVRL4) as Putative Therapeutic Target for a Specific Subtype of High Grade Serous Ovarian Cancer-An Integrative Multi-Omics Approach.

Authors:  Christine Bekos; Besnik Muqaku; Sabine Dekan; Reinhard Horvat; Stephan Polterauer; Christopher Gerner; Stefanie Aust; Dietmar Pils
Journal:  Cancers (Basel)       Date:  2019-05-20       Impact factor: 6.639

9.  Prognostic value of CD8 + PD-1+ immune infiltrates and PDCD1 gene expression in triple negative breast cancer.

Authors:  Joe Yeong; Jeffrey Chun Tatt Lim; Bernett Lee; Huihua Li; Clara Chong Hui Ong; Aye Aye Thike; Wei Hseun Yeap; Yi Yang; Ansel Yi Herh Lim; Timothy Kwang Yong Tay; Jin Liu; Siew-Cheng Wong; Jinmiao Chen; Elaine Hsuen Lim; Jabed Iqbal; Rebecca Dent; Evan W Newell; Puay Hoon Tan
Journal:  J Immunother Cancer       Date:  2019-02-06       Impact factor: 13.751

Review 10.  Emerging Therapeutics to Overcome Chemoresistance in Epithelial Ovarian Cancer: A Mini-Review.

Authors:  Robert Cornelison; Danielle C Llaneza; Charles N Landen
Journal:  Int J Mol Sci       Date:  2017-10-18       Impact factor: 5.923

View more

北京卡尤迪生物科技股份有限公司 © 2022-2023.