| Literature DB >> 31340499 |
Vasileios Atsaves1, Vasiliki Leventaki2, George Z Rassidakis3,4, Francois X Claret5.
Abstract
Immune check point blockade therapy has revolutionized the standard of cancer treatment and is credited with producing remarkable tumor remissions and increase in overall survival. This unprecedented clinical success however is feasible for a limited number of cancer patients due to resistance occurring before or during a course of immunotherapy, which is often associated with activation of oncogenic signaling pathways, co-inhibitory checkpoints upregulation or expansion of immunosuppressive regulatory T-cells (Tregs) in the tumor microenviroment (TME). Targeted therapy aiming to inactivate a signaling pathway such as the Mitogen Activated Protein Kinases (MAPKs) has recently received a lot of attention due to emerging data from preclinical studies indicating synergy with immune checkpoint blockade therapy. The dimeric transcription factor complex Activator Protein-1 (AP-1) is a group of proteins involved in a wide array of cell processes and a critical regulator of nuclear gene expression during T-cell activation. It is also one of the downstream targets of the MAPK signaling cascade. In this review, we will attempt to unravel the roles of AP-1 in the regulation of anti-tumor immune responses, with a focus on the regulation of immune checkpoints and Tregs, seeking to extract useful insights for more efficacious immunotherapy.Entities:
Keywords: AP-1; CTLA-4; PD-1; PD-L1; Tregs; immune checkpoints; immunotherapy; targeted therapy; transcription factors
Year: 2019 PMID: 31340499 PMCID: PMC6678392 DOI: 10.3390/cancers11071037
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Cancers (Basel) ISSN: 2072-6694 Impact factor: 6.639
Ongoing clinical trials with ICB and BRAF (BRAFi) or MEK (MEKi) inhibitors in cancer patients.
| National Clinical Trials Identifier | Phase | Targeted Therapy/Immunotherapy | Institution | Scheduling | Indications |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| NCT02224781 | III | D + T, Ipi + Nivo or Ipi + Nivo, D + T | University of Alabama at Birmingham Cancer Center | Sequential | Melanoma |
| NCT02910700 | II | Nivo + T, with or w/o D | M.D Anderson Cancer Center | Concurrent | Melanoma |
| NCT01940809 | I | Ipi w and w/o D, T and/or Nivo | Brigham and Women’s Hospital | Sequential | Melanoma |
| NCT02130466 | I/II | Pembro + T + D | Several locations, USA | Combination | Melanoma |
| NCT02858921 | II | D + T + Pembro | Several location, Australia | Sequential | Melanoma |
| NCT02625337 | II | Pembro + D + T | Antoni van Leeuwenhoek ziekenhuis Amsterdam, | Concurrent | Melanoma |
| NCT03149029 | II | Pembro + D + T | Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center | Concurrent | Melanoma |
| NCT02060188 | II | Nivo + Ipi + C | Several locations, USA | Concurrent | Colon Cancer |
| NCT02818023 | I | Pembro + V + C | UPMC Cancer Center Hillman Cancer Center | Concurrent | Melanoma |
| NCT03273153 | III | Atezo + C | University of South Alabama; Mitchell Cancer Institute | Concurrent | Melanoma |
| NCT03013491 | I/II | CX-072 (anti-PD-L1) + V | Several locations, USA | Concurrent | Solid tumors and Lymphoma |
| NCT02968303 | II | V + C, Ipi + Nivo | Several locations, The Netherlands | Sequential | Melanoma |
Abbreviations: Pembro; pembrolizumab (anti-PD-1), Atezo; atezolizumab (anti-PD-L1), Nivo; Nivolumab (anti-PD-1), Ipi; ipilimumab (anti-CTLA4), CX-072; anti-PD-L1 prodoby, D; dabrafenib (BRAFi), T; trametinib (MEKi), V; vemurafenib (BRAFi), C; Cobimetinib (MEKi).
Figure 1Transcriptional and post-translational activation of AP-1 in T-cells. UV (Ultraviolet); CD28 (co-stimulation, signal-2), TCR (T-cell receptor, signal-1).
Figure 2AP-1-dependent regulation of immune checkpoints.
Summary of AP-1 interactions in T-cell immune responses.
| Gene Name | Direction of the Interaction | AP-1 Member | Mechanism | Activity | Cell Type | References |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
|
| → (upregulates) | cJun | PI3K, JNK and ERK dependent | T-cell activation | [ | |
|
| ← (upregulates) | Fra-2 and other AP-1 | TCR/CD28 stimulation/ ICOS promoter binding | Expansion of several T helper subsets and Tregs | T-cells | [ |
|
| ← (upregulates) | AP-1 | 4-1BB promoter binding. MEK and JNK dependent. | Co-stimulation of T-cells responses | T-cells | [ |
|
| → (upregulates) | BATF | Inhibits T-cell function | T-cells in chronic viral infections | [ | |
|
| ← (upregulates) | c-Fos | PD-1 promoter binding | Increased tumor burden when expressed in infiltrating T-cells | T-cells in mouse model of lung carcinoma | [ |
|
| ← (upregulates) | cJun, JunB | PD-L1 promoter binding | EBV(+) tumor cells | [ | |
|
| ← (upregulates) | cJun | MAPK dependent | BRAFi melanoma cell lines | [ | |
|
| ← (upregulates) | cJun | PD-L1 promoter binding. MAPK dependent | Lung carcinoma | [ | |
|
| → (downregulates) | AP-1 | MAPK dependent | Inhibits T-cell activation | CD4+ T-cells or T-cell blasts | [ |
|
| → (downregulates) | cJun, cFos | JNK dependent | Maintains unresponsiveness of Tregs | Natural occurring Tregs | [ |
|
| ← (upregulates) | cJun, cFos | FOXP3 promoter binding. JNK dependent | Controls FOXP3 promoter activity | Sepsis model of Tregs | [ |
|
| ← (upregulates) | AP-1 | TGFb-induced FOXP3 promoter binding. MAPK dependent | Controls FOXP3 transcriptional activity | Tregs | [ |
|
| ← (downregulates) | BATF3 | FOXP3 promoter binding | Transcriptional suppressor of differentiation of Tregs | Tregs | [ |
|
| ← (upregulate) | JunB | IRF4 dependent | Loss of JunB in Tregs results in multi-organ autoimmunity | Tregs | [ |