| Literature DB >> 29587679 |
Maryam Salimi1, Ruozheng Wang2,3, Xuan Yao1, Xi Li1, Xiyan Wang2,3, Yuhui Hu2,3, Xumei Chang2,3, Peiwen Fan2,3, Tao Dong1,2,3,4, Graham Ogg5,6,7.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Innate lymphoid cells (ILC) are part of a heterogeneous family of haematopoietic effector cells which lack re-arranged antigen-specific receptors. They promote host defense and contribute to tissue and metabolic homeostasis, wound healing and immune surveillance. Their role in human cancer immunity is less defined, and therefore we aimed to identify the frequency and phenotype of distinct ILC groups in various types of cancer.Entities:
Keywords: Breast cancer; Gastrointestinal cancer; Immune checkpoint; Innate lymphoid cells
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2018 PMID: 29587679 PMCID: PMC5870240 DOI: 10.1186/s12885-018-4262-4
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Cancer ISSN: 1471-2407 Impact factor: 4.430
ILC populations surface markers
| Studied populations | Definition |
|---|---|
| ILC1 | CD45+ Lin- CD56- CD127+ c-Kit- CRTH2- |
| ILC2 | CD45+ Lin- CD56- CD127+ c-Kit−/+ CRTH2+ |
| ILC3 | CD45+ Lin- CD56- CD127+ c-Kit+ CRTH2- |
| NK cells | CD45+ Lin- CD56+ |
Lineage markers: CD3, CD14, CD19, CD11c, CD11b, CD56, IL-3R, FcεRI, TCRαβ and TCRγδ. ILC were divided into 3 groups based on expression of cell surface markers. ILC1 cells were identified as Lineage negative, CD45+, CD127+, CD56−, CRTH2− and c-Kit−. Group 2 ILC were negative for lineage markers, CD56 and expressed CRTH2 and CD127. Group 3 ILC expressed c-Kit, CD45 and CD127, did not express CD56 and CRTH2
Fig. 1Frequency of ILC populations in breast and GI tumours. Percentage of lineage negative CD45 positive ILC groups in benign (n = 4) and malignant breast tumours (n = 17) determined by flow cytometry (a), PBMCs from patients with benign (n = 4) and malignant (n = 15) breast tumours (b), lesional (n = 15) and para-lesional (n = 15) gastrointestinal tumour tissues (c). Frequency of ILC1, ILC2 and ILC3 is shown as the percentage of lineage negative, CD56−, CD45+ and NK cells are gated from lineage negative, CD45+ cells
Fig. 2Expression of PD1 and CTLA-4 on ILC populations. Expression of PD1 (a left graph) and CTLA-4 (a right graph) on ILC groups in peripheral blood of patients with malignant breast tumour (n = 14–16), benign breast tumour tissue (n = 4) and malignant breast tumour tissue (n = 14–16) determined by flow cytometry. Expression of PD1 (b left graph) and CTLA-4 (b right graph) on ILC groups in peripheral blood of patients with malignant GI tumour (n = 8–12), para-lesional tumour tissue (n = 8–12) and malignant GI tumour tissue (n = 8–12)
Fig. 3Expression of MHC II and Klrg1 on ILC populations. Expression of MHC II (a left graph) and Klrg1 (b left graph) on ILC groups in peripheral blood of patients with malignant breast tumour (n = 16–17), benign breast tumour tissue (n = 4) and malignant breast tumour tissue (n = 16–17) determined by flow cytometry. Expression of MHC II (a right graph) and Klrg1 (b right graph) on ILC groups in peripheral blood of patients with malignant GI tumour (n = 9–12), para-lesional tumour tissue (n = 9–12) and malignant GI tumour tissue (n = 9–12)
Fig. 4Expression of CD69, CCR7 and CD44 on ILC populations. Expression of CD69 (a left graph), CCR7 (b left graph) and CD44 (c left graph) on ILC groups in peripheral blood of patients with malignant breast tumour (n = 14–17), benign breast tumour tissue (n = 4) and malignant breast tumour tissue (n = 14–17) determined by flow cytometry. Expression of CD69 (a right graph), CCR7 (b right graph) and CD44 (c right graph) on ILC groups in peripheral blood of patients with malignant GI tumour (n = 9–13), para-lesional tumour tissue (n = 9–13) and malignant GI tumour tissue (n = 9–13)