| Literature DB >> 32000794 |
Vildan B Cetintas1,2, Nizar N Batada3.
Abstract
The PTEN tumor suppressor is the second most commonly inactivated gene across cancer types. While it's role in PI3K/AKT and DNA damage pathways are clear, increasing evidences suggest that PTEN may also promote anti-tumor immunity. PTEN-deficient tumors are characterized by (i) reduced levels of cytotoxic T cells, helper T cells and NK cells, (ii) elevated pro-oncogenic inflammatory cytokines like CCL2 and (iii) increased levels of immunosuppressive cells such as MDSCs and Tregs. An intriguing possibility is that link between PTEN and anti-tumor immunity is mediated by the interferon signaling pathway. In this review, we summarize the evidences for the mechanistic link between PTEN deficiency and immunosuppressive tumor microenvironment and the interferon signaling pathway. We further discuss how the link between these pathways can be exploited for development of personalized immunotherapy for patients with PTEN deficient tumors.Entities:
Keywords: Immunosuppressive tumor microenvironment; Immunotherapy resistance; Innate immunity; Interferon; PTEN; cGAS/STING
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2020 PMID: 32000794 PMCID: PMC6993356 DOI: 10.1186/s12967-020-02219-w
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Transl Med ISSN: 1479-5876 Impact factor: 5.531
Fig. 1Prevalence of PTEN mutations in different cancers. The graph is from cbioportal and has been restricted to pancancer studies
PTEN-mediated immunogenicity in different types of tumors
| Tumor | Main evidence | Experimental setup and methods | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Lung cancer [ | A decrease in | Cell lines PC14PE6/AS2 A549 | shRNA, plasmid transfection, WB, FC, luciferase reporter assay, intracellular ROS assay |
| GBM [ | Tumors had increased levels of B7-H1 protein and tumor-specific T cells lysed human glioma targets expressing PTENwt more effectively than those expressing PTENmutant | U87MG Cell line and primary cultures | FC, RT-PCR, IHC, WB, NB |
| Prostate cancer [ | Cytokines released by | Mice models Ptenpc+/+, Ptenpc−/− Ptenpc−/−; Stat3pc−/− | MACS, Cytokine array, FACS, CD8+ suppression assay, pStat3, WB, IHC, IF, GZMB mRNA, H&E |
| Melanoma [ | Cell lines ( | Expression of the IL-10, IL-6, VEGF, PI3K inhibitor treatment | |
| Melanoma samples lacking brisk host responses showed a higher tendency to lose | Brisk host response n = 33, without brisk host responses n = 34 | IHC (CD3 and | |
| Melanoma [ | Cell line A375 PTENsilenced vs control | shRNA, T cell treatment, Casp3 cleavage assay | |
Mice tumor model PTENsilenced vs control | Luciferase expressing T cells treatment, bioluminescence imaging, tumor size, survival | ||
CD8+ T cell infiltration | Clinical human samples | 135 resected tumors, IHC | |
| TCGA | Lymphocyte activation score, cytolic activity, expressions of LCK, IFNγ, GZMB | ||
Mice xenografts model PTENsilenced vs control | Chemokines and cytokines by Luminex assay | ||
| Clinical human samples | IHC confirmed increased VEGF in regions with | ||
| Sarcoma [ | Primary tumor, treatment-resistant metastatic tumor and germline tissue from a clinical case | IHC, RNA-seq and WES | |
| Tumors with biallelic | TCGA | Mutation, copy number, RNA-seq data from 241 untreated primary sarcomas | |
| Prostate cancer [ | Cell lines | FACS, IHC, Q-RT-PCR, T cell suppression assay, laser capture and microarray | |
| Pro-inflammatory cytokines produced by | |||
| Lymphoma [ | Low | 478 cases (training cohort) 269 cases (validation cohort) | IHC, FISH, Gene sequencing and expression array |
| GBM [ | 66 patients treated with PD-1 inhibitors profiled across a variety of timepoints, collecting DNA, RNA, tissue imaging | WES, qmIF, lymphocyte clonality analysis, RNA seq | |
| Prostate cancer [ | FoxP3+ Tregs were significantly increased in | 741 primary and 96 metastatic tumors, 94 radical prostatectomy specimens for IH validation | in silico analysis and IH validation for IDO1 and PDL1 |
FACS fluorescence activated cell sorting, FC flow cytometry, FISH fluorescein in situ hybridization, GBM glioblastoma, GZMB granzyme B, H&E hematoxylin and eosin, IF immunofluorescence, IHC immunohistochemistry, IL Interleukin, LCK lymphocyte cell-specific protein-tyrosine kinase, MACS magnetic-activated cell sorting, MDSC myeloid-derived suppressor cell, MHC major histocompatibility complex, NB Northern blot, PI3K phosphoinositide 3-kinase, qmIF quantitative multiplex immunofluorescence analysis, RT-PCR reverse transcription-polymerase chain reaction, ROS reactive oxygen species, shRNA short hairpin RNA, TCGA the cancer genome atlas, TME tumor microenvironment, VEGF vascular endothelial growth factor, WB Western blot, WES whole exome sequencing
Fig. 2Immunosuppressive characteristics of PTEN mutant tumors. PTEN-deficient tumors are infiltrated by MDSCs [27] and Tregs [29]. JAK/STAT pathway is activated [23], IDO1 protein [29], PD-1 receptors [22] and inhibitory cytokines [23, 25, 27] are upregulated. CD4+, CD8+ and NK cells exhibited reduced infiltration [23, 25]. Cytotoxic T lymphocytes have reduced lysing activities depending on the granzyme and perforin depletion [25, 26]
Fig. 3The potential mechanism of PTEN in type I interferon mediated immunogenicity. Cytosolic DNA sensing can be activated by intra or extra tumor mechanisms. In the tumor cells, cytosolic genomic or mitochondrial DNA binds to cGAS to trigger the production of cGAMP. cGAMP activates STING and then transcription factors IRF3 and NF-KB. PTEN dephosphorylates IRF3 and activates its import to the nucleus and starts the transcription of type I IFN and interferon stimulated genes (ISGs). In the macrophages and DCs, phagocytosed tumors genomic or mitochondrial DNA also activates cGAS/STING pathway
Summary of the facts that link PTEN loss in cancer to immunosuppression
| Function | Facts |
|---|---|
| PTEN’s role in tumor suppression | * PTEN deficiency is observed in nearly 40% of glioblastoma [ * PTEN contributes to repair of DNA damage via the homologous recombination pathway [ * PTEN deficiency is associated with malignant transformation, chemotherapy resistance and reduced survival [ |
| Tumors with PTEN deficiency have dysregulated infiltration of immune cells | * High levels of MDSCs [ * Reduced infiltration of CD4+, CD8+ and NK cells [ |
| PTEN’s role in type 1 IFN pathway | * Type 1 IFN pathway promotes anti-tumor immunity [ * PTEN is required for activation of STING mediated induction of interferon alpha/beta gene expression [ |
| Potential ways in which PTEN deficient tumors can be targeted by immunotherapies | * Activation of interferon alpha/beta signaling [ * Engineered PTENα expressing oncolytic viruses can enhance the development of antitumor immunity [ |