| Literature DB >> 31781488 |
Lourdes M Mendez1,2, Ryan R Posey1,2, Pier Paolo Pandolfi1,2.
Abstract
AML holds a unique place in the history of immunotherapy by virtue of being among the first malignancies in which durable remissions were achieved with "adoptive immunotherapy," now known as allogeneic stem cell transplantation. The successful deployment of unselected adoptive cell therapy established AML as a disease responsive to immunomodulation. Classification systems for AML have been refined and expanded over the years in an effort to capture the variability of this heterogeneous disease and risk-stratify patients. Current systems increasingly incorporate information about cytogenetic alterations and genetic mutations. The advent of next generation sequencing technology has enabled the comprehensive identification of recurrent genetic mutations, many with predictive power. Recurrent genetic mutations found in AML have been intensely studied from a cell intrinsic perspective leading to the genesis of multiple, recently approved targeted therapies including IDH1/2-mutant inhibitors and FLT3-ITD/-TKD inhibitors. However, there is a paucity of data on the effects of these targeted agents on the leukemia microenvironment, including the immune system. Recently, the phenomenal success of checkpoint inhibitors and CAR-T cells has re-ignited interest in understanding the mechanisms leading to immune dysregulation and suppression in leukemia, with the objective of harnessing the power of the immune system via novel immunotherapeutics. A paradigm has emerged that places crosstalk with the immune system at the crux of any effective therapy. Ongoing research will reveal how AML genetics inform the composition of the immune microenvironment paving the way for personalized immunotherapy.Entities:
Keywords: acute myeloid leukemia; genetics; immune landscape; immunotherapy; metabolism; targeted (selective) treatment
Year: 2019 PMID: 31781488 PMCID: PMC6856667 DOI: 10.3389/fonc.2019.01162
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Oncol ISSN: 2234-943X Impact factor: 6.244
Figure 1Genetic aberrations drive dysfunctional cell-intrinsic and -extrinsic signaling, with the former having direct metabolic consequences and the latter having direct immunologic consequences. Further dysregulation is driven via interactions between the altered metabolome and immune system as a consequence of the existing immunometabolic network. Recurrent genetic mutations found in AML have been demonstrated to promote T regulatory cell expansion, suppress proliferation of T effector cells, skew macrophage maturation toward the suppressive M2 phenotype. A subset of these immune suppressive mechanisms are mediated by metabolites. In AML, depletion of amino acids, such as tryptophan and asparagine via increased arginase-1 and IDO levels in leukemia cells, M2-macrophages and MDSC, limits T effector activity. Furthermore, mobilization of fatty acids in the leukemia microenvironment from adipocytes, a subset of which can function as pro-inflammatory lipid mediators, may simultaneously provide anti-apoptotic and immunosuppressive signals inhibiting T effector activity and promoting suppressive immune cell types. In leukemia cells the metabolic regulatory network that is stimulated by adipocytes may include upregulation of the lipid scavenger receptor CD36, the fatty acid activated receptor/transcription factor PPARG, the fatty acid binding protein (FABP4) along with BCL2. Upstream genetic determinants/mutations regulating specific metabolic adaptations in leukemia cells is the subject of ongoing research.
Figure 2Schematic showing possible integration of available tools for improved risk stratification to inform therapeutic strategy for an individual patient. Advances in next gen sequencing technology, metabolite quantification methods, and widespread use of cytometry-based immunophenotyping, will continue to improve the feasibility of these techniques as diagnostic tools. Better understanding of the relationships and dependencies between the immunologic, metabolic, and genetic perturbations seen in AML can allow for refined usage of available and emerging therapeutics and combinations thereof.