| Literature DB >> 28753959 |
Chia-Jung Li1, Wan-Ting Liao2,3, Meng-Yu Wu4, Pei-Yi Chu5,6,7.
Abstract
The tumor microenvironment is a complex system that is affected by various factors, including hypoxia, acidosis, and immune and inflammatory responses, which have significant effects on tumor adhesion, invasion, metastasis, angiogenesis, and autophagy. In this hostile tumor microenvironment, autophagy of tumor cells can promote tumor growth and metastasis. As autophagy is a double-edged sword in tumors, treatment of cancer via regulation of autophagy is extremely complicated. Therefore, understanding the relationship between tumor autophagy and the tumor microenvironment is extremely important. As the immune milieu plays an important role in tumor development, immunotherapy has become a promising form of cancer therapy. A multi-pronged treatment approach using immunotherapy and molecular targets may become the major direction for future cancer treatments. This article reviews existing knowledge regarding the immune factors in the tumor microenvironment and the status of tumor autophagy research.Entities:
Keywords: autophagy; tumor immunity; tumor immunotherapy; tumor microenvironment
Mesh:
Year: 2017 PMID: 28753959 PMCID: PMC5536054 DOI: 10.3390/ijms18071566
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Mol Sci ISSN: 1422-0067 Impact factor: 5.923
Figure 1The crosstalk between autophagy and tumor immune microenvironment. A plethora of noncancerous cells in the tumor microenvironment regulate the infiltration, accumulation, and proliferation of immune cells in tumors. The immune system can be implicated in both inherent and acquired resistance to targeted therapies. (a) Cells of the innate and adaptive immune systems typically act to eliminate transformed and malignant cells. Rare tumor cells evade immune surveillance mechanisms and establish a microenvironment that stimulates tumor growth, proliferation, and angiogenesis. This is primarily mediated by tumor- and stromal cell–derived growth factor and cytokines that suppress the immune system while promoting tumor cell proliferation, angiogenesis, and metastasis. Under these conditions, factors secreted by immune effector cells recruited to the tumor site may contribute to tumor development. Tumor formation involves the co-evolution of neoplastic cells together with extracellular matrix and vascular endothelial, stromal and immune cells. The immune infiltrate can include multiple cell types, these cell populations can have both pro- and anti-tumor functions and can vary in their activation status and their localization within the tumor. The extracellular matrix (ECM), together with cellular components of the tumor microenvironment, are actively remodelled and reprogrammed by CAFs. CAFs can have significant plasticity and diverge with regard to activation status, localization within the tissue, stress response and origin. CAFs have multiple functions in the TME, in part through ECM-mediated T cell trapping and cytokine-regulatory T cell exclusion; (b) In normoxic cells, perforin forms pores in the gigantosome membrane, allowing granzyme B release and initiation of autophagy. In hypoxic cells, excessive autophagy leads to fusion of gigantosomes with autophagosomes and the subsequent formation of amphisomes, which contain granzyme B and perforin. Fusion of amphisomes with lysosomes triggers selective degradation of granzyme B, making hypoxic tumor cells less sensitive to natural killer (NK) cell–mediated killing; (c) Tumor cells show a decrease in the cell-surface levels of major histocompatibility complex (MHC) that is often associated with less antigen presentation; thus, there is reduced recognition and eradication of tumor cells by CD8+ T cells specific for conventional tumor antigens. However, immune targets can be divided into those that prime DC, those that affect T cell checkpoint co-stimulation, those that affect T cell exhaustion and those that affect T cell recruitment. CAFs, cancer-associated fibroblasts; NK, natural killer; DC, dendritic cell; PGE2, prostaglandin E2; TGFβ, transforming growth factor-β. CXCL, chemokine (C-X-C motif) ligand 1; SDF1, stromal cell-derived factor 1; CCL2, chemokine (C-C motif) ligand 2; VEGF, vascular endothelial growth factor; MMP, matrix metalloproteinases; IL-6, Interleukin 6; MFAP5, microfibrillar associated protein 5; VCAN, Versican; EGF, epidermal growth factor; HGF, hepatocyte growth factor; ECM, extracellular matrix; RAB5, Ras-related protein; LC3, light chain 3, MHC, major histocompatibility complex.
Autophagy-related genes.
| Yeast | Mammals | Gene Functions |
|---|---|---|
| Atg1 | ULK1,2 | Protein kinase: Atg1–Atg13–Atg17–Atg29 complex |
| Atg2 | Atg2 | Atg2–Atg18 complex |
| Atg3 | Atg3 | E2-like enzyme |
| Atg4 | Atg4 | Hydrolases: Atg8 activation |
| Atg5 | Atg5 | E3-like enzyme for Atg5–Atg12 conjugation |
| Atg6 | Beclin-1 | Subunit of Vps34/PI3K complex |
| Atg7 | Atg7 | E1-like enzyme for LC3-conjugation |
| Atg8 | LC3 | Ubiquitin-like modifiers: Conjugates to PE to localize to autophagosome |
| Atg9 | Atg9 | Atg9 interacts Atg2–Atg18 complex: membrane bound |
| Atg10 | Atg10 | E2-like enzyme for Atg12-conjugation |
| Atg12 | Atg12 | Modifier: Conjugates to Atg5 |
| Atg13 | Atg13 | mTOR signaling: Atg1–Atg13–Atg17–Atg29 complex |
| Atg14 | Atg14 | Subunit of Vps34 PI3K complex |
| Atg16 | Atg16 | E3-like activity |
| Atg17 | RB1CC1 | Regulator: Atg1–Atg13–Atg17–Atg29 complex complex |
| Atg18 | WIPI-1 | Atg2–Atg18 complex |
Therapeutic compounds and targets that modulate autophagy-dependent immune responses.
| Drugs | Cancer Types | Autophagy-Modulating Mechanism | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|
| Honokiol | Prostate cancer | Induce ROS-dependent autophagy cytoprotectively | [ |
| Tamoxifen | Breast cancer | Down-regulate activity on anti-oxidative enzyme | [ |
| 2-Methoxyestradiol | Osteosarcoma | Induce RNA-dependent protein kinase (PKR)-dependent autophagy | [ |
| Temozolomide | Glioma | Down-regulate expression on activating transcription factor 4 (ATF4) | [ |
| Oridonin | Esophageal cancer | Targeting epidermal growth factor (EGF) interactions in ROS dependent mechanism | [ |
| Cucurbitacin | Lung cancer | Induced protective autophagy mediated by ROS | [ |
| Chloroquine | Bladder cancer | Targeting lysosomal functions and block autophagy | [ |
| Quercetin | Cervical cancer | Down-regulate activity on LC-3 and beclin-1 | [ |
| Eriocalyxin B | Breast cancer | Suppression of Akt/mTOR/p70S6K signaling | [ |
| Shikonin | Liver cancer | Targeting extracellular signal–regulated kinases (ERK) interactions in ROS dependent mechanism | [ |