| Literature DB >> 31143186 |
John Daly1, Mattias Carlsten2, Michael O'Dwyer1.
Abstract
Natural Killer (NK) cells are cytotoxic lymphocytes that play a key role in the immune system, targeting and destroying invading pathogens and malignantly transformed cells. Evading NK cell-mediated immunosurveillance is therefore critical to facilitating cancer cell survival and metastasis. Signals from a range of inhibitory and activating receptors located on the NK cell surface regulate NK cell cytotoxicity. Recently, attention has turned to the role of hypersialylated tumor cell surfaces in mediating immune-evasion of NK cells. Two inhibitory sialic acid-binding immunoglobulin-like lectin (Siglec) receptors are expressed by NK cells: Siglec-7 and Siglec-9. The abundance of sialic acids on tumor cell surface is hypothesized to regulate NK cell-mediated cytotoxicity by interacting with Siglec-7 and Siglec-9, causing a dampening of NK cell activation pathways. Targeting Siglec-7 and Siglec-9, or the sialic acid coated tumor cell surface is therefore being investigated as a novel therapeutic approach to enhance the NK cell response against cancer. In this review we report on the currently published documentation of the role for Siglec-7 and Siglec-9 receptors on NK cells and their ligands expressed by tumor cells. We also discuss the strategies currently explored to target Siglec-7, Siglec-9 and the sialylated tumor cell surface as well as the impact abrogation of these interactions have on NK cell cytotoxicity against several cancer types.Entities:
Keywords: NK cells; Siglec; cancer; immunotherapy; sialic acids
Year: 2019 PMID: 31143186 PMCID: PMC6521797 DOI: 10.3389/fimmu.2019.01047
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Immunol ISSN: 1664-3224 Impact factor: 7.561
Figure 1NK cells express a repertoire of activating and inhibitory receptors. The integration of activating and inhibitory signals generated through receptor-ligand interactions dictates whether an NK cell will be triggered to release its cytotoxic granules or not. Cancerous cells can take advantage of this receptor balance to evade immunosurveillance by upregulating or downregulating ligands for specific receptors, changing the overall signal to dampen NK cell cytotoxicity and thereby escape destruction.
Figure 2Siglec-7 mediated inhibition of NK cell cytotoxicity towards tumor cells. Trans or cis binding of Siglec-7 to its cognate ligand results in the Src kinase-mediated phosphorylation of the ITIM motif of Siglec-7. Phosphorylated ITIM sites recruit phosphatases SHP1/2 which inhibit classical NK cell activating pathways such as the NKG2D pathway, stimulated by the binding of NKG2D to stress ligands such as MIC A/B expressed by genetically damaged cells, allowing the tumor cell to escape and continue migrating throughout the circulatory system, eventually reaching new niche sites.
Figure 3Hypersialylation of tumor cell surfaces facilitates NK cell immune-evasion through interactions with inhibitory Siglec receptors. Upregulation of sialyltransferase expression in the Golgi apparatus, coupled with sialidase dysregulation, leads to an increased expression of sialylated glycans and proteins on the cell surface with the ability to engage inhibitory receptors Siglec-7 and Siglec-9, resulting in a dampening of NK cell functions, including anti-tumor cytotoxicity.