| Literature DB >> 30467503 |
Andrea M Chambers1, Kyle B Lupo1, Sandro Matosevic1,2.
Abstract
Energy metabolism is key to the promotion of tumor growth, development, and metastasis. At the same time, cellular metabolism also mediates immune cell survival, proliferation and cytotoxic responses within the tumor microenvironment. The ability of natural killer cells to eradicate tumors relies on their ability to functionally persist for the duration of their anti-tumor effector activity. However, a tumor's altered metabolic requirements lead to compromised functional responses of cytokine-activated natural killer cells, which result in decreased effectiveness of adoptive cell-based immunotherapies. Tumors exert these immunosuppressive effects through a number of mechanisms, a key driver of which is hypoxia. Hypoxia also fuels the generation of adenosine from the cancer-associated ectoenzymes CD39 and CD73. Adenosine's immunosuppression manifests in decreased proliferation and impaired anti-tumor function, with adenosinergic signaling emerging as an immunometabolic checkpoint blockade target. Understanding such immunometabolic suppression is critical in directing the engineering of a new generation of natural killer cell-based immunotherapies that have the ability to more effectively target difficult-to-treat solid tumors.Entities:
Keywords: adenosine; immunometabolism; immunotherapy; natural killer cells; tumor microenvironment
Mesh:
Year: 2018 PMID: 30467503 PMCID: PMC6235907 DOI: 10.3389/fimmu.2018.02517
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Immunol ISSN: 1664-3224 Impact factor: 7.561
Sources of immunometabolic inhibition of NK cell functions.
| Cancer cells | LDHA-associated lactic acid production | Downregulation of NFAT; inhibition of effector functions | ( |
| NK cells | HIF-1α | Downregulation of NKp46, NKp30, NKp44, and NKG2D, inactivation of mTOR | ( |
| Cancer cells (renal cancer) | HIF-2α | Upregulation of ITPR1 to regulate autophagy through calcium signaling | ( |
| Irregular vascularization/Tumor microenvironment | Hypoxia | Generation of adenosine and reduction in NK cytotoxic function, Overexpression of HIF proteins (1α and 2α) | ( |
| Cancer cells/Tumor microenvironment | Extracellular adenosine | Binding to A2AR receptor to inhibit proliferation, reduction of cytokine production, and reduction of cytotoxic function | ( |
| Exogenous source | Rapamycin or Torin-1 (metabolic inhibitors) | Inhibition of the mTOR pathway | ( |
| Exogenous source | Overstimulation with IL-15 | Diminished cytolytic and inflammatory function | ( |
Sources of immunometabolic regulation of NK cell functions.
| NK cells | mTOR (mTORC1)—activation occurs via PI3K, PDPK1, and AKT most potently by IL-15 | Production of granzyme B and perforin, enhancement of glycolysis | ( |
| NK cells | Control of glucose metabolism through citrate-malate shuttle | ( | |
| T-cells, dendritic cells | IL-2 | Increase in cytotoxicity of NK cells | ( |
| Immune Cells | IL-15 | Increase in cytotoxicity of NK cells; Upregulation of HIF-1α and downregulation of TKTL1 (during hypoxia); Glycolysis regulation through mTOR | ( |
| Cancer cells/Tumor microenvironment | Adenosine | Binding to A1 or A3 receptor stimulates NK cell cytotoxicity (via a decrease in cAMP); Increase in IFNy production (with a combination of IFN-α) | ( |
| Immune Cells (APCs) | IL-12 | Increase in cytotoxicity of NK cells | ( |
Figure 1Drawing representation of immunometabolic suppression of NK cell functions induced by adenosine metabolism in the TME involving CD39 and CD73 on cancer cells via signaling through the adenosine A2A receptor on NK cells.