Literature DB >> 29909021

NFκB in Pancreatic Stellate Cells Reduces Infiltration of Tumors by Cytotoxic T Cells and Killing of Cancer Cells, via Up-regulation of CXCL12.

Bharti Garg1, Bhuwan Giri1, Shrey Modi1, Vrishketan Sethi1, Iris Castro2, Oliver Umland3, Yuguang Ban4, Shweta Lavania1, Rajinder Dawra1, Sulagna Banerjee1, Selwyn Vickers5, Nipun B Merchant1, Steven Xi Chen4, Eli Gilboa2, Sundaram Ramakrishnan1, Ashok Saluja6, Vikas Dudeja7.   

Abstract

BACKGROUND & AIMS: Immunotherapies are ineffective against pancreatic cancer. We investigated whether the activity of nuclear factor (NF)κB in pancreatic stromal cells contributes to an environment that suppresses antitumor immune response.
METHODS: Pancreata of C57BL/6 or Rag1-/- mice were given pancreatic injections of a combination of KrasG12D/+; Trp53 R172H/+; Pdx-1cre (KPC) pancreatic cancer cells and pancreatic stellate cells (PSCs) extracted from C57BL/6 (control) or mice with disruption of the gene encoding the NFκB p50 subunit (Nfkb1 or p50-/- mice). Tumor growth was measured as an endpoint. Other mice were given injections of Lewis lung carcinoma (LLC) lung cancer cells or B16-F10 melanoma cells with control or p50-/- fibroblasts. Cytotoxic T cells were depleted from C57BL/6 mice by administration of antibodies against CD8 (anti-CD8), and growth of tumors from KPC cells, with or without control or p50-/- PSCs, was measured. Some mice were given an inhibitor of CXCL12 (AMD3100) and tumor growth was measured. T-cell migration toward cancer cells was measured using the Boyden chamber assay.
RESULTS: C57BL/6 mice coinjected with KPC cells (or LLC or B16-F10 cells) and p50-/- PSCs developed smaller tumors than mice given injections of the cancer cells along with control PSCs. Tumors that formed when KPC cells were injected along with p50-/- PSCs had increased infiltration by activated cytotoxic T cells along with decreased levels of CXCL12, compared with tumors grown from KPC cells injected along with control PSCs. KPC cells, when coinjected with control or p50-/- PSCs, developed the same-size tumors when CD8+ T cells were depleted from C57BL/6 mice or in Rag1-/- mice. The CXCL12 inhibitor slowed tumor growth and increased tumor infiltration by cytotoxic T cells. In vitro expression of p50 by PSCs reduced T-cell migration toward and killing of cancer cells. When cultured with cancer cells, control PSCs expressed 10-fold higher levels of CXCL12 than p50-/- PSCs. The CXCL12 inhibitor increased migration of T cells toward KPC cells in culture.
CONCLUSIONS: In studies of mice and cell lines, we found that NFκB activity in PSCs promotes tumor growth by increasing expression of CXCL12, which prevents cytotoxic T cells from infiltrating the tumor and killing cancer cells. Strategies to block CXCL12 in pancreatic tumor cells might increase antitumor immunity.
Copyright © 2018 AGA Institute. Published by Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

Entities:  

Keywords:  CXCR4; Chemokine; Cytokine; Immune Suppression

Mesh:

Substances:

Year:  2018        PMID: 29909021      PMCID: PMC6679683          DOI: 10.1053/j.gastro.2018.05.051

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Gastroenterology        ISSN: 0016-5085            Impact factor:   22.682


  48 in total

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