| Literature DB >> 33148302 |
Yalu Zhang1, Qiaofei Liu1, Quan Liao2.
Abstract
Long noncoding RNAs (lncRNAs) are a class of endogenous, non-protein coding RNAs that are highly linked to various cellular functions and pathological process. Emerging evidence indicates that lncRNAs participate in crosstalk between tumor and stroma, and reprogramming of tumor immune microenvironment (TIME). TIME possesses distinct populations of myeloid cells and lymphocytes to influence the immune escape of cancer, the response to immunotherapy, and the survival of patients. However, hitherto, a comprehensive review aiming at relationship between lncRNAs and TIME is missing. In this review, we focus on the functional roles and molecular mechanisms of lncRNAs within the TIME. Furthermore, we discussed the potential immunotherapeutic strategies based on lncRNAs and their limitations.Entities:
Keywords: Cancer immunotherapy; LncRNA; Tumor immune microenvironment
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2020 PMID: 33148302 PMCID: PMC7641842 DOI: 10.1186/s13046-020-01727-3
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Exp Clin Cancer Res ISSN: 0392-9078
Fig. 1Schematic diagram of TME components. TME consists of cell component, the extracellular matrix (ECM) and abundant soluble signaling molecules. ECM is a macromolecular substance secreted by cells into the extracellular space and constitutes a complex network that supports tissue structure and the physiological activities of cells, including collagen, elastin fibrils, proteinases, proteoglycans (PGs), glycoproteins and glycosaminoglycans (GAGs). Signaling molecules in the TME include cytokines (e.g. TGF-β), growth factors (e.g. VEGF) and degradation and remodeling enzymes (e.g. MMPs). Substantial cells are divided into immune cells and non-immune cells. Non-immune cells are composed of epithelial, smooth muscle, vascular, glial, fat cells and fibroblasts. The infiltrating immune cells in the TME constitute the main body of TIME. TIME possesses distinct populations of myeloid cells and lymphocytes, two major categories of immune systems that act synergistically to initiate and reinforce innate and adaptive immunity in human, including macrophages, neutrophils, myeloid-derived suppressor cell (MDSC), B cells, T cells, natural killer (NK) cells, dendritic cells (DCs)
Fig. 2The proportion of ncRNAs in transcriptome and their classification. Protein-coding mRNAs only account for a small proportion in transcriptome, while the majority of them are non-coding RNAs (ncRNAs). Among them, ncRNAs can be divided into two main categories according to the molecular structure, linear RNA and circular RNA. The linear RNAs are further classified as small ncRNAs and long ncRNAs (lncRNAs) according to whether the length exceeds 200 nt. Short ncRNAs consist of microRNAs (miRNAs), small nucleolar RNAs, PIWI-interacting RNAs, endogenous small interfering RNAs. LncRNAs are composed of six types according to genomic location; sense, antisense, bidirectional, intronic, intergenic (lincRNAs) and enhancer
Fig. 3LncRNAs interactions and functions, and the mechanism of lncRNAs acting as miRNA sponge. a LncRNAs regulate gene expression by affecting local chromatin structure or recruiting regulatory proteins to specific loci. b LncRNAs facilitate RNA inhibition and degradation through interacting with mRNA and miRNA to control splicing or acting as a molecular sponge. c LncRNAs can serve as molecular scaffolds, guides, or decoys for regulatory proteins to regulate protein stability, activity, and localization. d Some lncRNAs are capable of encoding short peptides. e MiRNAs are able to directly bind to the matched regions of mRNAs by specific identification in a base-pairing manner, and thus inducing mRNA degradation at the post-transcriptional level by forming RNA-induced silencing complex (RISC) with related proteins such as Argonaute 2 (AGO2). LncRNAs harbor the miRNA response elements (MREs) with complementary miRNA binding sites and can competitively bind to miRNAs. Therefore, lncRNAs are capable of regulating the expression of mRNAs and exert its biological functions by sequestering functional miRNA molecules
LncRNAs involved in TIME
| LINK-A | — | TNBC | Upregulated in tumor cells | — | PtdIns(3,4,5)P3, GPCR, PKA, TRIM7 | LINK-A-dependent downregulation of antigenicity and intrinsic tumor suppression by mediating the crosstalk between PtdIns(3,4,5)P3 and GPCR | Overall survival | [ |
| LINC00665 | — | HGSOC | Upregulated in tumor cells | — | FTX | Influencing the infiltration level of macrophages and DCs, and inhibiting Tregs and prevent T-cell exhaustion by FTX | Overall survival | [ |
| GNAS-AS1 | Macrophages | ER+ Breast cancer | Upregulated in tumor cells and M2 macrophages | miR-433-3p | GATA3 | Accelerating M2 macrophage polarization | — | [ |
| GNAS-AS1 | Macrophages | Non-small cell lung cancer | Upregulated in tumor cells and M2 macrophages | miR-4319 | NECAB3 | Regulating macrophage polarization | Overall survival, metastasis-free survival | [ |
| CCAT1 | Macrophages | Prostate cancer | Downregulated in M2 macrophages | miR-148a | PKCζ | Regulating macrophage polarization | — | [ |
| NIFK-AS1 | Macrophages | Endometrial Cancer | Downregulated in M2 macrophages | miR-146a | Notch1 | Inhibiting M2 macrophage polarization | — | [ |
| XIST | Macrophages | Lung cancer | Upregulated in M2 macrophages | — | — | Regulating macrophage polarization | — | [ |
| MM2P | Macrophages | — | Upregulated in M2 macrophages | — | STAT6 | Accelerating M2 macrophage polarization | — | [ |
| ANCR | Macrophages | Gastric cancer | Upregulated in tumor cells | — | FoxO1 | Promoting tumor metastasis through hindering M1 type differentiation of macrophages by facilitating FoxO1 ubiquitination degradation | — | [ |
| LincRNA-p21 | Macrophages | Breast cancer | Upregulated in M2 macrophages | — | MDM2, P53, NF-κB, STAT3 | Inhibiting macrophage polarization into pro-inflammatory M1 by promoting its interaction with p53 | — | [ |
| LncRNA-cox-2 | Macrophages | HCC | Downregulated in M2 macrophages | — | — | Preventing immune evasion and metastasis of cancer by altering M1/M2 macrophage polarization | — | [ |
| MALAT1 | Macrophages | Thyroid cancer | Upregulated in tumor cells and M2 macrophages | — | FGF2 | MALAT1-mediated FGF2 protein secretion from TAMs inhibits inflammatory cytokines release, promotes proliferation, migration, and invasion of tumor cells and induces vasculature formation | — | [ |
| SBF2-AS1 | Macrophages | Pancreatic cancer | Upregulated in M2 macrophages | miR-122-5p | XIAP | M2 macrophages secrete SBF2-AS1-rich exosomes to promote tumor progression. | — | [ |
| LINC00662 | Macrophages | HCC | Upregulated in tumor cells | miR-15a, miR-16, miR-107 | WNT3A, Wnt/β-catenin signaling | Increasing tumor-derived WNT3A and activating Wnt/β-catenin signaling in macrophages via paracrine manner, and promoting M2 macrophages polarization | Overall survival, differentiation, tumor size, microvascular invasion | [ |
| MALAT1 | Macrophages | HCC | Upregulated in tumor cells | miR-140 | VEGF-A | Regulating macrophage polarization | — | [ |
| RPPH1 | Macrophages | Colorectal cancer | Upregulated in tumor cells | — | TUBB3 | Inhibiting TUBB3 ubiquitination and enhancing exosomes-mediated macrophages M2 polarization and influences the tumor microenvironment | Overall survival, TNM stages | [ |
| BCRT1 | Macrophages | Breast cancer | Upregulated in tumor cells and M2 [45]macrophages | miR-1303 | PTBP3 | Promoting M2 polarization of macrophages, mediated by exosomes, and accelerating cancer progression | Overall survival | [ |
| TUC339 | Macrophages | HCC | Upregulated in HCC-derived exosomes | — | — | Regulating macrophage activation and polarization | — | [ |
| CASC2c | Macrophages | Glioblastoma | Downregulated in tumor cells | miR-338-3p | FX | Inhibiting macrophage migration and polarization to the M2 subtype by FX | — | [ |
| CamK-A | Macrophages | Breast cancer | Upregulated in tumor cells | — | PNCK, IκBα, NF-κB, VEGF, IL-8, and GLUT3 | Promoting infiltrated macrophage recruiting, angiogenesis, tumor microenvironment remodeling, and cancer development, | Overall survival, recurrence-free survival | [ |
| Lnc-C/EBPβ | MDSCs | — | Upregulated in MDSCs | — | C/EBPβ isoform LIP | Controlling immunosuppressive function and differentiation of MDSCs by a set of target transcripts | — | [ |
| Lnc-C/EBPβ | MDSCs | — | Upregulated | — | IL4il, C/EBPβ isoform LIP, WDR5 | Promoting PMN-MDSCs but impede differentiation of M-MDSCs | — | [ |
| RNCR3 | MDSCs | — | Upregulated in MDSCs | miR-185-5p | Chop | Regulating MDSC differentiation and suppressive function to influence tumor growth by RNCR3/miR-185-5p/Chop axis | — | [ |
| Lnc-chop | MDSCs | — | Upregulated in MDSCs | — | CHOP, C/EBPβ isoform LIP | Interacting with CHOP and the C/EBPβ isoform LIP to regulate immunosuppressive function of MDSCs | — | [ |
| Olfr29-ps1 | MDSCs | — | Upregulated | miR-214-3p | MyD88 | Regulating the differentiation and function of M-MDSCs by a m6A-modified Olfr29-ps1/miR-214-3p/MyD88 regulatory network | — | [ |
| Pvt1 | MDSCs | — | Upregulated | — | C-myc | Regulating the immunosuppression activity of PMN-MDSCs by c-myc | — | [ |
| AK036396 | MDSCs | — | Upregulated | — | Ficolin B | Inhibiting maturation and accelerating immunosuppression of PMN-MDSCs by Enhancing the Stability of Ficolin B | — | [ |
| MALAT1 | MDSCs | Lung Cancer | Downregulated | — | — | Negatively regulating the generation of MDSCs | — | [ |
| RUNXOR | MDSCs | Lung cancer | Upregulated | — | RUNX1 | Mediating MDSCs associated immunosuppression by targeting RUNX1 | Smoking history, TNM stage, histological tumor type and lymph node metastasis | [ |
| HOTAIRM1 | MDSCs | Lung Cancer | Downregulated | — | HOXA1 | Regulating MDSCs associated immunosuppression by targeting HOXA1 | Smoking history, TNM stage, histological tumor type and lymph node metastasis | [ |
| HOTAIR | MDSCs | HCC | Upregulated | — | CCL2 | Promoting proliferation of macrophages and MDSCs | — | [ |
| Gm43181 | Neutrophils | — | Upregulated in neutrophils | — | CXCR2 | Provoking inflammation by regulating the recruitment and activation of neutrophils into the specific tissues | — | [ |
| MALAT1 | Neutrophils | — | Upregulated | — | p300, IL-8 | Ameliorating the inflammatory injury by inhibiting chemotaxis of neutrophils through p300-mediated downregulation of IL-8 | — | [ |
| XIST | Neutrophils | — | Upregulated | miR-21 | IL-12A | Increasing IL-12A by binding to miR-21, thereby inducing neutrophil extracellular trap formation | — | [ |
| TCL6 | Neutrophils | Breast cancer | Downregulated in tumor cells | — | — | — | Overall survival | [ |
| HOTTIP | Neutrophils | Ovarian cancer | Upregulated in tumor cells | — | c-jun, IL-6, PD-L1 | Enhancing IL-6 expression to potentiate immune escape of tumor cells by upregulating the expression of PD-L1 in neutrophils | Overall survival | [ |
| Lnc-DC | DCs | — | Upregulated in DCs | — | STAT3, TLR9, TIMP, MMP | Regulating the differentiation and capacity of DCs by activating the transcription factor STAT3 | — | [ |
| NEAT1 | DCs | — | Upregulated in DCs | miR-3076-3p | NLRP3 | Inducing tolerogenic phenotype in DCs by inhibiting activation of NLRP3 inflammasome | — | [ |
| HOTAIRM1 | DCs | — | Downregulated in DCs | miR-3960 | HOXA1 | Regulating DC differentiation by competitively binding to endogenous miR-3960 | — | [ |
| Lnc-Dpf3 | DCs | — | Upregulated in DCs | — | HIF-1α | CCR7-inducible lnc-Dpf3 restrains DC migration by inhibiting HIF-1α-mediated glycolysis | — | [ |
| MALAT-1 | DCs | Colon cancer | Upregulated in DCs | — | Snail | Blocking MALAT-1 significantly decreases the TADC-conditioned medium and CCL5-mediated migration and invasion by decreasing the Snail | — | [ |
| SNHG16 | B cells | DLBCL | Upregulated in tumor cells | miR-497-5p | PIM1 | Promoting proliferation and inhibits apoptosis of lymphoma cells by targeting miR-497-5p/PIM1 axis | — | [ |
| TUG1 | B cells | DLBCL | Upregulated in tumor cells | — | MET | Regulating tumor growth by ubiquitination of MET | — | [ |
| SNHG14 | B cells | DLBCL | Upregulated in tumor cells | miR-5590-3p | ZEB1 | SNHG14/miR-5590-3p/ZEB1 positive feedback loop promotes lymphoma progression and immune evasion by PD-1/PD-L1 checkpoint | — | [ |
| MALAT1 | B cells | DLBCL | Upregulated in tumor cells | miR-195 | PD-L1 | Promoting tumorigenesis and immune escape of lymphoma by sponging miR-195 | — | [ |
| MINCR | B cells | BL | Upregulated in tumor cells | — | AURKA, AURKB, and CDT1 | Controlling cell cycle by participating in MYC transcriptional network | — | [ |
| NEAT1 | B cells | DLBCL | Upregulated in tumor cells | miR-34b-5p | GLI1 | Promoting B cell proliferation and lymphomagenesis by the miR-34b-5p-GLI1 pathway. | — | [ |
| FIRRE | B cells | DLBCL | Upregulated in tumor cells | — | Wnt/β-catenin pathway | Promoting the development of lymphoma by Wnt/β-catenin signaling pathway | Overall survival | [ |
| PANDA | B cells | DLBCL | Downregulated in tumor cells | — | MAPK/ERK pathway | Inhibiting the growth of lymphoma by inactivation of MAPK/ERK signaling pathway | Overall survival, recurrence-free survival, B symptoms, Ann arbor stages, CHOP-like treatment, Rituximab and IPI | [ |
| OR3A4 | B cells | DLBCL | Upregulated in tumor cells | — | Wnt/β-catenin signaling | Promoting cell proliferation through activating Wnt/β-catenin signaling pathway | Overall survival | [ |
| SMAD5-AS1 | B cells | DLBCL | Downregulated in tumor cells | miR-135b-5p | APC, Wnt/β-catenin pathway | Inhibiting proliferation of lymphoma through Wnt/β-catenin pathway via targeting miR-135b-5p to elevate expression of APC | — | [ |
| HULC | B cells | DLBCL | Upregulated in tumor cells | — | Bcl-2, cyclin D1 | Regulating cell proliferation and inducing apoptosis by Bcl-2 and cyclin D1 | Overall survival, progression–free survival, Ann Arbor stages, B symptoms, CHOP-like treatment, Rituximab and IPI | [ |
| HOTAIR | B cells | DLBCL | Upregulated in tumor cells | — | PI3K/AKT/NF-κB pathway | Promoting cell proliferation by PI3K/AKT/NF-κB pathway | Overall survival, tumor size, clinical stage, B symptoms and IPI | [ |
| LUNAR1 | B cells | DLBCL | Upregulated in tumor cells | — | E2F1, cyclin D1 and p21 | Regulating cell proliferation by E2F1, cyclin D1 and p21 | Overall survival, progression-free survival, stage, rituximab and IPI | [ |
| PEG10 | B cells | DLBCL | Upregulated in tumor cells | — | — | — | Overall survival, B symptoms, CHOP-like treatment, Rituximab and IPI | [ |
| MALAT-1 | B cells | DLBCL | Upregulated in tumor cells | — | LC3-II/LC3-I, p62, ATG5 | Regulating autophagy-related signaling pathway on chemotherapy resistance | — | [ |
| FAS-AS1 | B cells | Non-Hodgkin's lymphomas | Upregulated in tumor cells | — | RBM5 | Regulating of the sFas expression by interacting with RBM5 to influence cell apoptosis | — | [ |
| FENDRR | Tregs | HCC | Downregulated in Tregs | miR-423-5p | GADD45B | Inhibiting the Treg-mediated immune escape of tumor cells through upregulating GADD45B by sponging miR-423-5p | — | [ |
| SNHG1 | Tregs | Breast cancer | Upregulated in Tregs | miR-448 | IDO | Accelerating the differentiation of Treg cells and promoting the immune escape of cancer by regulating miR-448/IDO axis | — | [ |
| POU3F3 | Tregs | Gastric cancer | Upregulated in Tregs | — | TGF-β/SMAD2/3 pathway | Promote the distribution of Tregs in peripheral blood T cell, increasing cell proliferation by recruiting TGF-β as well as activating TGF-β signal pathway | Tumor size | [ |
| lnc-EGFR | Tregs | HCC | Upregulated in Tregs | — | EGFR, AP-1/NF-AT1 axis | Stimulating Treg differentiation, suppresses CTL activity and promoting HCC growth in an EGFR-dependent manner. | Tumor size | [ |
| RP11-323N12.5 | Tregs | Gastric cancer | Upregulated in tumor cells | — | YAP1, TAZ, TEAD, Hippo signaling | Promoting Treg cell differentiation by enhancing YAP1 transcription in T cells | Disease-free survival, stage | [ |
| SNHG16 | Tregs | Breast cancer | Upregulated in tumor cells | miR-16-5p | SMAD5 | Breast cancer-derived exosomes transmit SNHG16 to induce CD73+γδ1 Treg cells by activation of the TGF-β1/SMAD5 pathway | — | [ |
| Lnc-sox5 | CTLs | Colorectal cancer | Upregulated in tumor cells | — | IDO1 | Regulating the infiltration and cytotoxicity of CD3+CD8+T cells by IDO1, and unbalancing the TME | Metastasis | [ |
| NEAT1 | CTLs | Lung cancer | Upregulated in tumor cells | — | DNMT1, P53, cGAS/STING | Interacting with DNMT1 to regulate malignant phenotype of cancer cell and cytotoxic T cell infiltration by epigenetic inhibition of p53, cGAS, and STING | Tumor stage, lymph node metastasis. | [ |
| NEAT1 | CTLs | HCC | Upregulated in CTLs | miR-155 | Tim-3 | Regulating the antitumor activity of CD8+ T cells against HCC by miR-155/Tim-3 axis | — | [ |
| Lnc-Tim3 | CTLs | HCC | Upregulated in CTLs | — | Tim-3, Bat3, Lck/ NFAT1/AP-1 pathway | Exacerbating CD8+ T cell exhaustion by binding to Tim-3 and inducing nuclear translocation of Bat3 | — | [ |
| LINC00473 | CTLs | Pancreatic cancer | Upregulated in tumor cells | miR-195-5p | PD-L1 | Inhibiting activation of CD8+ T cells by sponging miR‐195‐5p to elevate the expression of PD‐L1 | — | [ |
| SNHG14 | CTLs | DLBCL | Upregulated in tumor cells | miR-5590-3p | ZEB1, PD-1 | Promoting apoptosis of CD8+ T cells by PD-1/PD-L1 immune checkpoint, and eventually leading to the immune evasion | — | [ |
| MALAT1 | CTLs | DLBCL | Upregulated in tumor cells | miR-195 | PD-L1 | Promoting apoptosis of CD8+ T cells and immune escape of lymphoma | — | [ |
| GM16343 | CTLs | — | Upregulated in CTLs | — | IFN-γ | Promoting IL-36β to regulate the TME by CD8+ T cells | Overall survival | [ |
| NKILA | CTLs | breast and lung cancer | Upregulated in CTLs | — | NF-κB | Regulating T cell sensitivity to AICD by inhibiting NF-κB activity | Overall survival | [ |
| INCR1 | CTLs | — | Upregulated in CTLs | — | PD-L1, JAK2, STAT1, and IDO1, HNRNPH1 | Regulating tumor IFNγ signaling and CTL-mediated killing | — | [ |
| Lnc-CD56 | NK cells | — | Upregulated in NK cells | — | CD56 | Serving as a positive regulator of CD56 in primary human NK cells and differentiated NK cells from human CD34+ hematopoietic progenitor cells. | — | [ |
| IFNG-AS1 | NK cells | — | Upregulated in NK cells | — | IFNG | Triggering of the natural cytotoxicity receptors induces lncRNA IFNG-AS1 expression, and IFNG-AS1 increases IFN-γ secretion | — | [ |
| GAS5 | NK cells | Gastric cancer | Downregulated in NK cells | miR-18a | — | Promoting NK cell cytotoxicity against gastric cancer by regulating miR-18a | — | [ |
| GAS5 | NK cells | HCC | Downregulated in NK cells | miR-544 | RUNX3 | Enhancing the killing effect of NK cell on liver cancer by regulating miR-544/RUNX3 | — | [ |
| linc-EPHA6-1 | NK cells | Lung cancer | — | miR-4485-5p | NKp46 | IFNβ-induced exosomal linc-EPHA6-1 promotes cytotoxicity of NK cells by miR-4485-5p to increase NKp46 expression | — | [ |
Abbreviations:AICD Activation-induced cell death, BL Burkitt lymphoma, CTLs Cytotoxic T lymphocytes, DCs Dendritic cells, DLBCL Diffuse large B cell lymphoma, HCC Hepatocellular carcinoma, HGSOC High-grade serous ovarian cancer, IPI International prognostic index scores, NK Natural killer, TNBC Triple-negative breast cancer, Tregs Regulatory T cells
Fig. 4Role of lncRNAs in crosstalk between macrophages and tumor. a LncRNAs regulate M1/M2 macrophage polarization through miRNA-mediated alterations in the expression of downstream target proteins. b LncRNAs modulate the protein secretion of TAMs and affect the survival and metastasis of tumor cells. c TAMs can also influence the malignant behaviors of tumor cells by exosomes rich in specific lncRNA. d Macrophages phagocytose and internalize tumor-secreted proteins or tumor-derived exosomes rich in lncRNAs with regulatory function and thus induce macrophage polarization. e LncRNAs are involved in macrophage recruitment from circulating monocytes by regulating the production of secreted proteins, and in turn induce the polarization of macrophages into TAMs in the TME
Fig. 5Schematic representation about the mechanisms of lnc-C/EBPβ, lnc-chop and RNCR3. BMC, bone marrow cell; MDSC, myeloid-derived suppressor cells; M-MDSC, monocytic MDSC; PMN-MDSC, polymorphonuclear MDSC; C/EBPβ-LIP, C/EBPβ isoform liver-enriched inhibitory protein (LIP); IL4i1, interleukin 4 induced gene-1
Fig. 6HOTTIP, lnc-DC and lnc-Dpf3 are involved in the regulation of immune cells. a HOTTIP in tumor cells by affecting IL-6 secretion to interact with neutrophils, increase the PDL-1 expression. b Lnc-DC influences DC differentiation and stimulate T cell activation by activating the transcription factor STAT3. c Lnc-Dpf3 affects the migratory ability of DCs by regulating their glucose metabolism
Fig. 7Schematic diagram of the mechanism of lncRNAs in T cells. a Exosomal SNHG16 and RP11-323N12.5 derived from tumor cell are internalized by T cells to affect their differentiation, and ultimately generates immunosuppressive effect. b Exosomes abundant in substantial lncRNAs are secreted by exhausted CD8+ T cells. These exosomes can be taken up by non-exhausted CD8+ T cells, and thus weakens their anticancer effect
Fig. 8Schematic representation of available methods for regulating lncRNA levels in TIME