| Literature DB >> 29900059 |
Víctor A Arrieta1, Bernardo Cacho-Díaz2, Junfei Zhao3, Raul Rabadan3, Li Chen4, Adam M Sonabend4.
Abstract
The relationship between anti-tumoral immunity and cancer progression is complex. Recently, immune editing has emerged as a model to explain the interplay between the immune system and the selection of genetic alterations in cancer. In this model, the immune system selects cancer cells that grow as these are fit to escape immune surveillance during tumor development. Gliomas and glioblastoma, the most aggressive and most common of all primary malignant brain tumors are genetically heterogeneous, are relatively less antigenic, and are less responsive to immunotherapy than other cancers. In this review, we provide an overview of the relationship between glioma´s immune suppressive features, anti-tumoral immunity and cancer genomics. In this context, we provide a critical discussion of evidence suggestive of immune editing in this disease and discuss possible alternative explanations for these findings.Entities:
Keywords: cancer genomics; cancer immune editing; equilibrium; escape; glioma
Year: 2018 PMID: 29900059 PMCID: PMC5993488 DOI: 10.1080/2162402X.2018.1445458
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Oncoimmunology ISSN: 2162-4011 Impact factor: 8.110
Figure 1.Heatmap displaying a differential gene expression in a color scale in HLA class I-mutant gliomas vs. wild-type HLA class I gliomas. Tumors harboring HLA class I mutations overexpress lymphocyte killer effector genes. As previously defined, “Cytolytic activity” is included as a single gene and determined by Granzyme A (GZMA) and Perforin (PRF1), two cytolytic genes expressed in activated CD8+ T-cells. *P < 0.05 represents the significance of the association between the expression of each gene and HLA class I mutant-gliomas. [Adapted by permission from Springer Nature: Nature Biotechnology, Comprehensive analysis of cancer-associated somatic mutations in class I HLA genes, Shukla et al., copyright 2015].
Figure 3.Experimental or clinical evidence regarding immune editing in gliomas with numbers representing the references related to this evidence. No evidence exists about the elimination phase in gliomas. Commonly, gliomas do not spread outside the central nervous system. However, glioma metastases have been detected in transplanted organs of immunosuppressed transplant recipients, suggesting that the equilibrium phase is taking place in the systemic compartment, Associations between loss-of-function HLA class I mutations and upregulation of lymphocyte killer effector genes, as well as HLA class I and APM defects have been found in gliomas, evidencing the escape phase. In addition, loss of glioma-specific antigens after using targeted immunotherapies lead to a negative selection of tumor variants cells expressing these antigens.,,,