| Literature DB >> 28638385 |
Sebastian Diegeler1, Christine E Hellweg1.
Abstract
Ionizing radiation can affect the immune system in many ways. Depending on the situation, the whole body or parts of the body can be acutely or chronically exposed to different radiation qualities. In tumor radiotherapy, a fractionated exposure of the tumor (and surrounding tissues) is applied to kill the tumor cells. Currently, mostly photons, and also electrons, neutrons, protons, and heavier particles such as carbon ions, are used in radiotherapy. Tumor elimination can be supported by an effective immune response. In recent years, much progress has been achieved in the understanding of basic interactions between the irradiated tumor and the immune system. Here, direct and indirect effects of radiation on immune cells have to be considered. Lymphocytes for example are known to be highly radiosensitive. One important factor in indirect interactions is the radiation-induced bystander effect which can be initiated in unexposed cells by expression of cytokines of the irradiated cells and by direct exchange of molecules via gap junctions. In this review, we summarize the current knowledge about the indirect effects observed after exposure to different radiation qualities. The different immune cell populations important for the tumor immune response are natural killer cells, dendritic cells, and CD8+ cytotoxic T-cells. In vitro and in vivo studies have revealed the modulation of their functions due to ionizing radiation exposure of tumor cells. After radiation exposure, cytokines are produced by exposed tumor and immune cells and a modulated expression profile has also been observed in bystander immune cells. Release of damage-associated molecular patterns by irradiated tumor cells is another factor in immune activation. In conclusion, both immune-activating and -suppressing effects can occur. Enhancing or inhibiting these effects, respectively, could contribute to modified tumor cell killing after radiotherapy.Entities:
Keywords: cytokines; cytotoxic T-cells; natural killer cells; radiation-induced bystander effects; radiotherapy
Year: 2017 PMID: 28638385 PMCID: PMC5461334 DOI: 10.3389/fimmu.2017.00664
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Immunol ISSN: 1664-3224 Impact factor: 7.561
Figure 1Role of immune responses and affection of the immune system in different dose ranges after whole-body exposure (or bone marrow exposure) or partial body exposure. A modulation of immune responses can be expected in all dose ranges. Anti-inflammatory effects are observed in low-dose radiotherapy (partial body exposure), and proinflammatory and immune stimulating effects in some tumor radiotherapy settings (partial body exposure), but also immune-suppressing effects might occur. In whole-body exposure to medium to high doses of ionizing radiation, exacerbation of innate immune responses, and bone marrow depression dominate the picture of acute radiation sickness.
Modulation of lymphocyte activity after irradiation of tumor tissue.
| Tumor cell | Radiation quality | Dose | Study type | Lymphocyte type | Activity | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Mouse adenocarcinoma | γ-Irradiation (137Cs source) | 20 Gy | CTL | ⇑ | ( | |
| 67NR (breast) | γ-Irradiation (60Co source) | 2–6 Gy | CTL | ⇑ | ( | |
| A20 (lymphoma) | ||||||
| WiDr (colon) | γ-Irradiation (137Cs source) | 10–20 Gy | CTL | ⇑ | ( | |
| Caco-2 (colon) | ||||||
| SW620 (colon) | ||||||
| SW1463 (colon) | ||||||
| HCT116 (colon) | ||||||
| A549 | ||||||
| MelJuSo (melanoma) | γ-Irradiation (137Cs source) | 1–30 Gy | CTL | ⇑ | ( | |
| RMA-S lymphoma | NK | ⇑ | ( | |||
| B16 melanoma | ||||||
| A549 (lung carcinoma) | X-rays exposure (ClinaciX Linear Accelerator) | 8 Gy | NK | ⇑ | ( | |
| NCI-H23 (lung adenocarcinoma) | ||||||
| MDA-MB-231 (breast) | Electron beam exposure (Elekta Synergy linear accelerator) | 8 Gy | NK | ⇑ | ( | |
| U87MG (glioblastoma) | ||||||
| A673 (muscle) | ||||||
| PANC-1 (pancreas) | ||||||
| Lewis Lung carcinoma | X-rays exposure (6-MV photon beam, dose rate 6.1 Gy/min) | 12 Gy | Treg | ⇑ | ( | |
| CT-26 colon carcinoma | ||||||
| B16 melanoma | γ-Irradiation (137Cs source) | 6–12 Gy | Treg | ⇑ | ( | |
| EL-4 lymphoma | ||||||
| PANC-02 (pancreas) | γ-Irradiation (Siemens Gammatron) | 5 Gy × 2 Gy | CTL, NK | CTL > NK | ( | |
| LNCaP (prostate) | γ-Irradiation (137Cs source) | 8 Gy | CTL | ⇑ | ( | |
| MDA-MB-231 (breast) | ||||||
| H1703 (lung) | Proton ion irradiation (200 MeV, LET 0.5 keV/µm) | 8 Gy | ||||
| JHC7 (chordoma) | ||||||
| Mouse SCCVII (squamous cell carcinoma) | Carbon ion irradiation (290 MeV/n, LET 77 keV/µm) | 10 Gy/min | CTL+ DC | ⇑ | ( | |
⇑ up.
.
.
LET, linear energy transfer.
Figure 2Activation of CD8+ cytotoxic T-cells (CTL) by tumor specific antigens presented by the irradiated tumor cell and dendritic cells (DCs). After irradiation, the tumor cell shows an increased expression of surface markers CD95 (Fas), carcinoembryonic antigen (CEA), intercellular adhesion molecule 1 (ICAM-1), and mucin-1 (MUC-1), as well as upregulated expression of major histocompatibility complex class I (MHC-I; HLA-ABC, human leukocyte antigen A, B, and C). While increased expression of CEA, ICAM-1, and MUC-1 are found to enhance cytolytic T-cell activity, CD95, and MHC-I are responsible for the activation of the T-cell. Increased expression of either has been associated with elevated activation of CTL. By binding with surface bound Fas-ligand (FasL) to the tumors’ CD95, T-cells can initiate tumor cell death via apoptosis. MHC-I molecules on the other hand present tumor specific antigens to the T-cell via the T-cell receptor and initiate degranulation of tumor necrosis factor α (TNF-α), perforines, and granzymes, thereby lysing the target tumor cell. After irradiation, tumor cells were found to produce unique antigen peptides, leading to increased tumor recognition. DCs, in their role as antigen-presenting cells, enable radiation-induced CTL lysis. DC take up tumor specific antigens and present them via MHC-II molecules to T-helper cells (CD4+), which prime and activate CTL, e.g., via secretion of interleukin-2 (IL-2).
Figure 3Activation and inhibition of natural killer (NK) cells by irradiated tumor cells. (A) Irradiated tumor cells show increased expression of the surface proteins MHC class I chain-related protein A and B (MIC-A/B) and HCMV UL16-binding proteins (ULBP1-3), which are ligands for NK cell activating receptors NKG2D. Activation of NK cells is orchestrated by a balancing of bound activating and inhibiting receptors. Increased expression of NKG2D ligands therefore shifts the balance toward NK cell activation and triggers degranulation of perforine, granzyme B, and interferon γ (IFN-γ)—the NK cells’ mediators of cytolytic activity. (B,C) Decreasing NK cell cytotoxicity on the other hand is mediated by different mechanisms. (B) Major histocompatibility complex class I (MHC-I) is a ligand for the inhibiting receptors on the NK cell surface and has been found to be elevated in irradiated tumor cells. By increasing the binding of inhibitory receptors, the NK cells’ cytotoxic capabilities are diminished. (C) Another mechanism is to decrease the binding to the activating NK cell receptors, like NKG2D. This can be accomplished by cleaving the respective ligands on the target cell surface with matrix metalloproteases (MMP).
Cyto- and chemokine response and damage-associated molecular patterns (DAMPs) release by tumor cells after irradiation.
| Tumor cell | Radiation quality | Dose | Study type | Cytokine/chemokine | Expression | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 4T1, 67NR, HTB-20 (breast carcinoma) | γ-Irradiation (137Cs source) | 2–12 Gy | CXCL16 | ⇑ | ( | |
| T98G (glioblastoma) | γ-Irradiation (60Co source) | 1 Gy | IL-6, IL-8 | ⇑ | ( | |
| 4T1, 67NR (breast carcinoma), B16/F10 (melanoma), MC57 (fibrosarcoma), MCA38 (colon carcinoma) | γ-Irradiation (137Cs source) | 12 Gy | CXCL16 | ⇑ | ( | |
| A549, TE2, KYSE70 (esophageal squamous), NCI-H460 (large cell carcinoma), WiDr (colon adenocarcinoma), MCF-7, NCI-H1703 (lung), DU-145, PC-3 (prostate), HCT-15 (colorectal), SW480, T98G and U251MG | Photonic | 2.1–15 Gy | HMGB1 | ⇑ | ( | |
| DF-19, BW-225 (squamous cell carcinoma) | Ionizing radiation (not specified) | 2 Gy | CXCL1, CXCL12 | = | ( | |
| HT1080 (colorectal tumor), U373MG, HT29, A549, MCF-7 | γ-Irradiation (60Co source) | 2 Gy, 6 Gy, 3 Gy × 2 Gy | Flt3-L, G-CSF, GM, CSF, IL-1β, IL-6, IL-8, IL-15, IP-10, MCP-1, TNF-α, TGF-β, VEGF | ⇑ | ( | |
| G-CSF, GM-CSF, IL-1β, IL-6, IL-8, MCP-1, TNF-α, TGF-β | ⇓ | |||||
| SW480 (colorectal) | X-rays | 5 Gy × 2 Gy, 3 Gy × 5 Gy, 15 Gy | IL-6, IL-8, IL-12p70, TNF-α, IL-10, IL-1β | ⇑ | ( | |
| LN-229 (glioma) | γ-Irradiation (Nordion GC40 Gammacell irradiator) | 10–30 Gy | IL-6 | ⇑ | ( | |
| IL-8, CXCL1 (only mRNA) | ||||||
| NCI-H446 (lung) | γ-Irradiation (137Cs source) | 8 Gy | TNF-α, IL-1α | ⇑ | ( | |
| Carbon ions (290 MeV/n, LET 13 keV/µm) | 2 Gy | TNF-α | ⇑ | |||
| RipTag5 mice (spontaneous insulinoma) | γ-Irradiation (60Co source) | 2 Gy | TNF-α, IL-12p70, IFN-γ | ⇑ | ( | |
| VEGF, TGF-β | ⇓ | |||||
| MCF7, SKBR3, and MDA-MB231 (breast) | γ-Irradiation (137Cs source) | 10–20 Gy | CXCL16 | ⇑ | ( | |
| NR-S1 and SCCVII (squamous cell carcinoma), NFSa, #8520 (fibrosarcoma) | γ-Irradiation (137Cs source) | 30–50 Gy | CCL3 (only mRNA) | ⇑ | ( | |
| Carbon ions (290 MeV/n, LET 50 keV/µm) | 30 Gy | CCL3, CXCL2 (only mRNA) | ||||
| TE2, KYSE70, A549, NCI-H460 and WiDr | Carbon ions (290 MeV/n, LET 30 keV/µm) | 0.9–3.5 Gy (iso-survival dose D10 | HMGB1 | ⇑ | ( | |
⇑ up, ⇓ down.
.
Figure 4Cytokine and chemokine expression by irradiated tumor cells, recruitment of immune cells and cytokine expression of the involved immune cells. Tumor cells express a plethora of soluble factors, cytokines and chemokines, and after irradiation, the secretion profile is modified. On the one hand, proinflammatory cytokines, like interleukin-6 (IL-6), IL-8, IL-12p70, tumor necrosis factor α (TNF-α), interferon γ (IFN-γ), and IL-1α, are increasingly expressed in tumor cells models in vitro and in vivo. On the other hand, the expression of immune-suppressive soluble factors is modified. IL-10 and IL-1β expression is increased, but secretion of vascular endothelial growth factor (VEGF) and transforming growth factor-β (TGF-β) is reduced. Further, chemokines, like CXCL16, are increasingly expressed and initiate recruitment of natural killer (NK) cells and other immune cells. The secretion of the damage-associated molecular pattern molecule high mobility group box 1 (HMGB1) is elevated as well in irradiated tumor cells, which leads to a activation of immune cells via the toll-like receptor 4 (TLR4), recruitment of immune cells via chemokine receptor CXCR4, as well as modification of cytokine expression of peripheral blood mononuclear cells.