| Literature DB >> 32162275 |
Xiaoguang Wang1, Brittany C Waschke1, Rachel A Woolaver1, Samantha M Y Chen1, Zhangguo Chen1, Jing H Wang2.
Abstract
Immunotherapy has been applied successfully to treat B-cell lymphomas in preclinical models or clinical settings. However, immunotherapy resistance is a major challenge for B-cell lymphoma treatment. To overcome this issue, combinatorial therapeutic strategies have been pursued to achieve a better efficacy for treating B-cell lymphomas. One of such strategies is to combine immunotherapy with histone deacetylase (HDAC) inhibitors. HDAC inhibitors can potentially increase tumor immunogenicity, promote anti-tumor immune responses, or reverse immunosuppressive tumor environments. Thus, the combination of HDAC inhibitors and immunotherapy has drawn much attention in current cancer treatment. However, not all HDAC inhibitors are created equal and their net effects are highly dependent on the specific inhibitors used and the HDACs they target. Hence, we suggest that optimal treatment efficacy requires personalized design and rational combination based on prognostic biomarkers and unique profiles of HDAC inhibitors. Here, we discuss the possible mechanisms by which B-cell lymphomas acquire immunotherapy resistance and the effects of HDAC inhibitors on tumor cells and immune cells that could help overcome immunotherapy resistance.Entities:
Keywords: B-cell lymphomas; HDAC inhibitor; anti-PD1 resistance; cancer immunotherapy; tumor immunogenicity
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2020 PMID: 32162275 PMCID: PMC7305292 DOI: 10.1007/s13238-020-00694-x
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Protein Cell ISSN: 1674-800X Impact factor: 14.870
Figure 1The interaction between HDAC inhibitors and immune system in B-cell lymphoma. Red arrow means increase or activation and green arrow means inhibition
Approved immunotherapeutic agents for B-cell lymphomas
| Therapy type | Name | Target | Subtype | Year |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Monoclonal antibodies | Rituximab | CD20 | NHL | 1997 |
| Obinutuzumab | CD20 | FL | 2016 | |
| Brentuximab vedotin | CD30 | Relapsed or refractory HL | 2011 | |
| Polatuzumab vedotin-piiq | CD79b | DLBCL | 2019 | |
| Immune checkpoint inhibitors | Nivolumab | PD1 | Relapsed or refractory HL | 2016 |
| Pembrolizumab | PD1 | Refractory HL and PMBCL | 2017 | |
| CAR T cells | Axicabtagene ciloleucel | CD19 | DLBCL, transformed FL, PMBCL | 2017 |
| Tisagenlecleucel | CD19 | Relapsed or refractory LBCL | 2018 |
DLBCL: diffuse large B-cell lymphoma; FL: follicular lymphoma; HL: Hodgkin lymphoma; LBCL: large B-cell lymphoma; NHL: non-Hodgkin lymphoma; PMBCL: primary mediastinal B-cell lymphoma
The application of HDAC inhibitors to B-cell lymphoma (BCL)
| Names | Potential mechanisms of action | Target (HDAC) | Subtype |
|---|---|---|---|
| Apicidin | Upregulate MHC I and II | HDAC3/6 | DLBCL |
| Belinostat | Induce cell death, upregulate MHC I and II | HDAC1/2/3/4/5/6/7/8/9/10/11 | DLBCL, MCL, FL, TL, HG-BCL, BL, PMBCL |
| Citarinostat | Induce cell death | HDAC6 | FL, MCL, HL |
| CI-994 | Induce cell death | HDAC1/3 | PEL, canine BCL |
| Entinostat | Induce cell death, upregulate MHC I and II, CD20, reduce MDSC | HDAC1/2/3/10 | HL, NHL, DLBCL, BL |
| MC1568 | CD1d-mediated antigen presentation | HDAC4/5/6/7/9/10 | MCL |
| Mocetinostat | Induce cell death, upregulate PD-L1 | HDAC1/2/3/11 | HL, DLBCL, FL |
| MPT0E028 | Induce cell death | HDAC1/2/6 | BL |
| OKI-5/OKI-179 | Induce cell death, upregulate PD-L1, MHC I and II | HDAC1/2/3/6/8/10/11 | DLBCL, murine BCL |
| Panobinostat | Induce cell death, CD1d-mediated antigen presentation, upregulate PD-L1, inhibit CD4/8 T cells | HDAC1/2/3/4/5/6/7/8/9/10/11 | HL, DLBCL, MCL, BL, murine and canine BCL |
| RGFP966 | Induce cell death, upregulate MHC I, CD80, CD86, PD-L1 | HDAC3 | DLBCL, murine BCL |
| Ricolinostat | Induce cell death | HDAC6 | DLBCL, MCL, FL |
| Romidepsin | Induce cell death, upregulate MHC I, CD80, CD86, CD20, NKG2D ligands | HDAC1/2 | BL, DLBCL, MCL, murine BCL |
| SBHA | Induce cell death | HDAC1/3 | MCL, PEL, canine BCL |
| Scriptaid | Induce cell death | HDAC1/3/8 | DLBCL, canine BCL |
| Sodium butyrate | Induce cell death, upregulate MHC I and II | HDAC1/2/3 | BL, FL, PEL, DLBCL |
| Trichostatin A | Induce cell death, upregulate MHC I and II, MHC II-mediated antigen presentation, CD1d-mediated antigen presentation, upregulate PD-L1, activate Tregs | HDAC1/2/3/6/8/10/11 | DLBCL, MCL, murine and canine BCL |
| Tubacin | Induce cell death, activate Tregs | HDAC6 | BL, canine BCL |
| Tubastatin A | Induce cell death, activate Tregs | HDAC6 | DLBCL, MCL |
| Valproic acid | Induce cell death, upregulate MHC I and II, CD80, CD86, PD-L1, CD20, activate Tregs | HDAC1/2 | BL, DLBCL, MCL, murine BCL |
| Vorinostat | Induce cell death, upregulate PD-L1, activate Tregs | HDAC1/2/3/5/6/8/9/10/11 | FL, DLBCL, HL, MCL, iNHL, BL, murine and canine BCL |
BL: Burkitt lymphoma; DLBCL: diffuse large B-cell lymphoma; FL: follicular lymphoma; HG-BCL: high grade B-cell lymphoma; HL: Hodgkin lymphoma; iNHL: indolent NHL; MCL: mantle cell lymphoma; NHL: non-Hodgkin lymphoma; PEL: primary effusion lymphoma; PMBCL: primary mediastinal B-cell lymphoma; TL: transformed lymphoma