| Literature DB >> 31396523 |
Andrea M Chambers1, Sandro Matosevic1,2.
Abstract
NK cell infiltration into solid tumors is often low and is largely represented by the poorly-cytotoxic CD56bright subset. Numerous studies have demonstrated that CD73, overexpressed under conditions of hypoxia, is involved in a variety of physiological processes, while its overexpression has been correlated with tumor invasiveness, metastasis and poorer patient survival in many cancers. Hypoxia itself favors aggressive glycolytic fueling of cancer cells, in turn driving reprogramming of NK cell metabolism. In addition, the hypoxia-driven activity of CD73 immunometabolically impairs NK cells in tumors, due to its catalytic role in the generation of the highly immunosuppressive metabolite adenosine. Adenosinergic signaling was shown to alter NK cell metabolic programs, leading to tumor-promoting environments characterized by NK cell dysfunction. Despite the demonstrated role of NK cell responses in the context of CD73 targeting, the engagement of NK cells in the setting of hypoxia/CD73 signaling has not been extensively studied or exploited. Here, we discuss available evidence on the role of hypoxic signaling on CD73-mediated activity, and how this relates to the immunometabolic responses of NK cells, with a particular focus on the therapeutic targeting of these pathways.Entities:
Keywords: CD73; NK cells; adenosine; hypoxia; immunometabolism; solid tumors
Year: 2019 PMID: 31396523 PMCID: PMC6668567 DOI: 10.3389/fmolb.2019.00060
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Mol Biosci ISSN: 2296-889X
Figure 1Hypoxia-CD73 signaling on NK cells. Hypoxia induces the expression of CD73 via HIF-1, itself consisting of HIF1-α and HIF-1β. HIF-1, in turn, regulates immune responses to hypoxia by controlling glycolytic metabolism and NK cells' adaptation to low oxygen. CD73 dephosphorylates AMP, produced by the conversion of ATP to AMP catalyzed by CD39, to generate adenosine. Extracellular adenosine can be transported intracellularly via equilibrative nucleoside transporters (ENT) or it can signal via adenosine receptors on the surface on NK cells, most notably the A2A receptor (A2AR). A2AR signaling via adenosine was shown to result in dysfunction of NK cell metabolic and effector functions. Extracellular adenosine can also be converted to inosine via the catalytic activity of adenosine deaminase (ADA).
Effects of hypoxia on NK cell function and metabolism.
| Hypoxia | Downregulation of activating NK receptors NKp46, NKp30, NKp44, and NKG2D | Balsamo et al., |
| Hypoxia (short and long term) in combination with IL-15 + IL-18 or IL-2 priming | Inhibition of oxidative metabolism, induction of CXCL8, VEGF, and MIF, release of IFNγ, TNFα, GM-CSF, and little CCL3 and CCL5 | Parodi et al., |
| Hypoxia (short term) in combination with IL-15 priming | No change in glycolytic flux or glucose consumption, enhanced release of CCL3, CCL4, CCL5, reduction in K562 cell lysis, enhanced migration through ECM (hypoxia only), progression to late apoptosis (hypoxia only) | Velásquez et al., |
| Chronic hypoxia (4 weeks at 1% O2) | 1,000 × reduced proliferative capacity, reduced ATP and VEGF production, loss of CD56 driven by miR-210 | Ang et al., |
| HIF-1α | HIF-1α-deficient NK cells show impaired tumor cell killing, but promote tumor inhibition due to lower tumor infiltration and lack of presentation of VEGFR-1 | Krzywinska et al., |
| Anoxia | Reduction in NK cytotoxicity against MHC-negative mouse tumor cell line YAC-1 | Loeffler et al., |
| Hypoxia (1% O2) | Reduction in NK cytotoxicity against K562 cells | Fink et al., |
| Hypoxia | Reduction in expression of NKG2D, perforin and granzyme B, decrease in cytotoxicity against multiple myeloma cells, reduction in CD16 expression; IL-2 rescued these effects | Sarkar et al., |
| Hypoxia (0.6%) | Reduction in NK cytotoxicity against K562 only when combined with lactate; limited but not impaired degranulation against myeloma cells and no change in ADCC due to hypoxia alone | Mahaweni et al., |
| Hypoxia (0.6%) | NKG2A+KIR− NK cells degranulate more than NKG2A+KIR+ cells; no difference in degranulation for KIR− NK cells with or without NKG2A | Mahaweni et al., |
Effects of CD73 on NK cell function and metabolism.
| CD73-produced adenosine | Impairment in activating receptor expression and expression of metabolism-related genes; inhibition of glycolysis and NK cytotoxicity | Chambers et al., |
| CD73 | Induced expression of CD73 on NK cells upon co-culture with mesenchymal stem cells | Chatterjee et al., |
| CD73-produced adenosine | Inhibition of IFN-γ and TNF-α expression; impairment in cytolysis | Raskovalova et al., |
| CD73 | Anti-4-1BB therapy did not alter recruitment of NK cells in CD73−/− mice | Chen et al., |
| CD73 | No change in anti-tumor effect of NK cells in CD73 KO mice | Wang et al., |
| CD73 and A2A receptor | Co-inhibition of CD73 and A2A receptor enhanced intratumoral activity of NK cells | Young et al., |
| CD73 | Blocking CD73 enhanced cytotoxicity of NK cells against ovarian cancer cells | Häusler et al., |
| CD73 | TGF-β induced CD73 on MDSCs which in turn suppressed NK-mediated cytolysis of tumors | Li et al., |
| CD73 | Antibody-mediated blockade of CD73 enhanced anti-metastatic function of NK cells by blocking tumor growth | Stagg et al., |
| CD73 | Blockade of CD73 enhanced cytotoxicity and intra-tumoral infiltration of chimeric antigen receptor-NK cells | Wang et al., |
| CD73-produced adenosine via A2A receptor | Inhibition of NK cell maturation and anti-tumor activity | Young et al., |
| CD73-produced adenosine | Inhibition of NK cell cytotoxicity | Raskovalova et al., |