| Literature DB >> 31624532 |
Chenyu Zhang1, Dihua Yu1.
Abstract
Recent breakthroughs in cancer immunotherapy have led to curative efficacy and significantly prolonged survival in a subset of patients of multiple cancer types; and immunotherapy has become the newest pillar of cancer treatment in addition to surgery, chemotherapy, radiotherapy and precision targeted therapies. In the metastatic disease setting, responses to immunotherapy are heterogeneous depending on the metastatic organ sites. The tissue-specific immuno-biology in the tumor microenvironments (TMEs) contributes to the differential therapeutic responses. Herein, we review the impact of tissue-specific tumor microenvironment on the efficacy of immunotherapy, with a focus on historically under-represented central nervous system (CNS) metastasis, which was excluded from most clinical trials. Retrospective examination of patient specimens and prospective clinical studies with immune checkpoint blockade (ICB) have established that brain can harbor an "active" immune microenvironment for effective immunotherapy. Regulation by the innate immune microglial cells and remodeling of the blood-brain barrier (BBB) may contribute to immunotherapeutic responses mediated by T lymphocytes. How to convert an "inactive" (cold) brain microenvironment into an "active" (hot) brain TME should be the focus of future efforts. Thus, procurement and complete examination of clinical specimens from brain metastases as well as development of appropriate preclinical brain metastasis models susceptible to external manipulation of the TME are critical steps towards that goal. A deeper understanding of the immuno-biology in distinct organ microenvironments will help to expand the benefits of immunotherapy to more needed patients.Entities:
Keywords: Brain metastasis; Immunotherapy; Therapeutic response; Tumor microenvironment
Year: 2019 PMID: 31624532 PMCID: PMC6781341 DOI: 10.1186/s13578-019-0349-0
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Cell Biosci ISSN: 2045-3701 Impact factor: 7.133
Tissue-resident innate immune cells in common organ sites of metastasis
| Metastasis target organ | Innate immune cell type | Function and contribution |
|---|---|---|
| Bone | Osteoclasts | Multinucleated cells transformed from monocytes that breaks down and absorbs the bone tissue, critical in the bone homeostasis |
| Brain | Microglia | Myeloid lineage glial cells accounting for 10-15% of all cells in the brain, mediating immune surveillance and inflammation in homeostasis and diseases of the central nervous system |
| Liver | Kupffer cells | Specialized macrophages lining the walls of the liver sinusoids, serving as the primary clearing cell for critical metabolic and detoxification functions of the liver |
| Lung | Alveolar macrophages | High activity macrophages located in pulmonary alveoli, the terminal units of gaseous exchange, primarily responsible for removing respiratory dust and pathogens |
| Omentum | Peritoneal macrophages | Omental milky spot-located macrophage cells playing house-keeping roles in immune surveillance, cell debris clearance and resolution of local inflammation |
Fig. 1Brain-specific metabolic TME may contribute to immunotherapy efficacy. In the mammalian CNS, mitochondrion-dependent oxidative phosphorylation (OXPHOS) is a favorable mechanism of cellular metabolism. Examination of clinical specimens suggests an immunosuppressive TME in the brain with fewer T cell infiltration, which is dependent on OXPHOS for effector functions, and elevated levels of OXPHOS activities in brain metastases. This highlights a prominent example where brain specific TME metabolic environment may contribute to therapeutic response