| Literature DB >> 30680248 |
Hee Sook Hwang1, Heejun Shin1, Jieun Han1, Kun Na1.
Abstract
Photodynamic therapy (PDT) is performed using a photosensitizer and light of specific wavelength in the presence of oxygen to generate singlet oxygen and reactive oxygen species(ROS) in the cancer cells. The accumulated photosensitizers in target sites induce ROS generation upon light activation, then the generated cytotoxic reactive oxygen species lead to tumor cell death via apoptosis or necrosis, and damages the target sites which results tumor destruction. As a consequence, the PDT-mediated cell death is associated with anti-tumor immune response. In this paper, the effects of PDT and immune response on tumors are reviewed. Activation of an immune response regarding the innate and adaptive immune response, interaction with immune cells and tumor cells that associated with antitumor efficacy of PDT are also discussed.Entities:
Keywords: Antitumor immune response; Cancer; Photodynamic therapy; Reactive oxygen species
Year: 2018 PMID: 30680248 PMCID: PMC6323106 DOI: 10.1007/s40005-017-0377-x
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Pharm Investig ISSN: 2093-5552
Fig. 1On the mechanism of the anti-tumor response induced by photodynamic therapy.
(Modified with permission from Nat Rev Cancer Copyright 2006)
Fig. 2Two major cell death morphotypes and their immunological profiles.
(Modified with permission from Apoptosis Copyright 2010)
PDT generated proinflammatory cytokines
| Cytokines | Secreted immune cells | Immunomodulatory function | Ref. |
|---|---|---|---|
| IL-1 α/β | Macrophages, DC, stromal cells, B cells | Highly inflammatory cytokine which upregulate host defense and function as an immunoadjuvant | Dinarello ( |
| IL-6 | Macrophages, stromal cells, T cells, B cells | Activator of immune system that involved in transition from innate to adaptive immunity | Scheller et al. ( |
| IL-8 | Monocytes | Chemoattractant cytokine that has target specificity for neutrophil and activate neutrophils in inflammatory areas | Bickel ( |
| TNF-α | Macrophages, stromal cells, mast cells, lymphocytes | Promote T cell activation and increase adaptive antitumor immunity | Brackett and Gollnick ( |
Fig. 3Photodynamic therapy induced inflammatory response.
(Modified with permission from Nat Rev Cancer Copyright 2006)
PDT-mediated immune cells
| Innate immunity | Location | Ref. |
|---|---|---|
| Macrophages | ||
| • Maintaining homeostasis and host defense through phagocytosis of foreign pathogens and cancer cells | Migrates from blood vessels to tissues | Wynn et al. ( |
| Neutrophils | ||
| • Release toxins that kill or inhibit pathogens and recruits other immune cells to the site of infection | Migrates from blood vessels to tissues | Nathan ( |
| Natural killer (NK) cells | ||
| • Type of cytotoxic lymphocyte critical to the innate immune response. | Circulates in blood and migrates to tissues | Kabingu et al. ( |
| Dendritic cells (DCs) | ||
| • Present antigens on its surface, thereby triggering adaptive immunity (Antigen presenting cells, APCs) | Present in epithelial tissue, including skin, lung, stomach and intestines. It migrates to lymph nodes upon activation | Mroz et al. ( |
Fig. 4Chemotherapy and PDT potentiate PD-L1 blockade to induce systemic antitumor immunity.
(Modified with permission from Nat Commun Copyright 2016)