| Literature DB >> 28382036 |
Tommaso Torcellan1, Jessica Stolp1, Tatyana Chtanova1.
Abstract
There is ample evidence for both beneficial and harmful involvement of the immune system in tumor development and spread. Immune cell recruitment to tumors is essential not only for the success of anticancer immune therapies but also for tumor-induced immune suppression. Now that immune-based therapies are playing an increasingly important role in treatment of solid tumors such as metastatic melanomas, precise analysis of the in vivo contributions of different leukocyte subsets in tumor immunity has become an even greater priority. Recently, this goal has been markedly facilitated by the use of intravital microscopy, which has enabled us to visualize the dynamic interactions between cells of the immune system and tumor targets in the context of the tumor microenvironment. For example, intravital imaging techniques have shed new light on T cell infiltration of tumors, the mechanisms of cancer cell killing, and how myeloid cells contribute to tumor tolerance and spread. This mini-review summarizes the recent advances made to our understanding of the roles of innate and adaptive immune cells in cancer based on the use of these in vivo imaging approaches.Entities:
Keywords: antitumor immune response; cellular dynamics; immune suppression; in vivo imaging; intravital microscopy; migration
Year: 2017 PMID: 28382036 PMCID: PMC5360706 DOI: 10.3389/fimmu.2017.00309
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Immunol ISSN: 1664-3224 Impact factor: 7.561
Figure 1Two-photon microscopy can be used to visualize immune cells and structures in normal tissue and within the tumor microenvironment. (A) Jablonski diagram comparing one-photon and two-photon excitation. Excitation occurs as fluorophores are excited from the ground to the first electron state. While one-photon excitation occurs through the absorption of a single photon, near simultaneous absorption of two lower-energy photons via short-lived intermediate states is required for two-photon excitation. After either excitation, the fluorophore relaxes to the lowest energy level of the first state. The subsequent fluorescence emission processes for both relaxation modes are the same. (B) Two-photon microscopy used to visualize blood vessels (red) and Lysozyme M+ myeloid cells (blue) in murine skin. (C) A single optical section of a Lewis lung carcinoma (blue) infiltrated by lysozyme M+ myeloid cells (green), blood vessels (red) visualized using two-photon microscopy.
Figure 2Photolabeling extends the utility of intravital microscopy for analysis of immune cell migration in cancer. (A) A schematic for labeling tumor-infiltrating cells. Two-photon microscopy is used to photoconvert cells within a specific region of interest within the tumor deposit. Microscopy and/or flow cytometry can then be used to detect photolabeled cells in distal organs. (B) An example of two-photon photoconversion of a single region (red) within a lymph node of a Kaede photoconvertible transgenic mouse. Non-photoconverted cells (green), LYVE-1+ lymphatics/collagen (blue). Scale bar represents 100 µm. (C) A single optical section of a murine lymph node containing photoconverted cells (red), non-photoconverted cells (green), LYVE-1+ lymphatics/collagen (blue). Scale bar represents 500 µm.