| Literature DB >> 34687436 |
Lennart Barthel1,2, Martin Hadamitzky3, Philipp Dammann4, Manfred Schedlowski3,5, Ulrich Sure4, Basant Kumar Thakur6, Susann Hetze4,3.
Abstract
In patients with glioblastoma, the average survival time with current treatments is short, mainly due to recurrences and resistance to therapy. This insufficient treatment success is, in large parts, due to the tremendous molecular heterogeneity of gliomas, which affects the overall prognosis and response to therapies and plays a vital role in gliomas' grading. In addition, the tumor microenvironment is a major player for glioma development and resistance to therapy. Active communication between glioma cells and local or neighboring healthy cells and the immune environment promotes the cancerogenic processes and contributes to establishing glioma stem cells, which drives therapy resistance. Besides genetic alterations in the primary tumor, tumor-released factors, cytokines, proteins, extracellular vesicles, and environmental influences like hypoxia provide tumor cells the ability to evade host tumor surveillance machinery and promote disease progression. Moreover, there is increasing evidence that these players affect the molecular biological properties of gliomas and enable inter-cell communication that supports pro-cancerogenic cell properties. Identifying and characterizing these complex mechanisms are inevitably necessary to adapt therapeutic strategies and to develop novel measures. Here we provide an update about these junctions where constant traffic of biomolecules adds complexity in the management of glioblastoma.Entities:
Keywords: Cancer microenvironment; Cancer stem cells; Glioblastoma; Glioma; Stem cells; Tumor microenvironment
Mesh:
Year: 2021 PMID: 34687436 PMCID: PMC8924130 DOI: 10.1007/s10555-021-09997-9
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Cancer Metastasis Rev ISSN: 0167-7659 Impact factor: 9.264
Fig. 1The niches of GBM niches and molecular landscape. a Overview of the TME of glioblastomas, with immunological players, and the three main niches that show a certain presence of specific molecular profiles. b The vascular niche: This niche is characterized by pronounced angiogenesis with a correspondingly increased VEGF. Here tumor macrophages are accumulated. Cytokines such as IL-6 and IL-8 are increased. Likewise, PTEN leads to increased matrix cross-linking proteins, resulting in accelerated angiogenesis. c The hypoxic niche contributes to glioma growth and resistance. PTEN is increased, and HIF contributes to the upregulation of VEGF and IL-8 and supports stem cell presence indicated via increased CD133. Via tyrosine hydroxylase activity, inflammatory cytokines are reduced. d The invasive niche: This nice is marked by a normal vessel distribution and the transition to normal brain tissue. Stem cells are associated with the vessel structure, glioma cells and microglia go along in tumor growth, and glioma stem cells are associated with endothelial cells via CXCL12/CXCR4. The cellular matrix also supports invasive tumor growth (details in text). Abbreviations: CD133, CD133–prominin 1, PROM1, is a transmembrane protein; CXCL12. C-X-C motif chemokine ligand 12; CXCR4, C-X-C chemokine receptor type 4; EGFR, epidermal growth factor receptor; HIF-1α, hypoxia-inducible factor 1-alpha; HIF-2α, hypoxia-inducible factor 2-alpha; IL-6, interleukin (6); INFy, interferon gamma; MGMT, O6-methylguanine–DNA methyltransferase; PD-L1, programmed death-ligand 1; PTEN, phosphatase and tensin homolog; TNF-α, tumor necrosis factor-alpha; VEGF, vascular endothelial growth factor
Summary of molecular factors significantly affecting TME and thus affecting GBM tumor growth
| Molecular factor | Interaction | References |
|---|---|---|
| EGFR | Promotes glioma cell migration, reduces inflammatory response; induces macrophage infiltration; support neo-angiogenesis; increased in a hypoxic environment | [ |
| EGFRvIII | Supports glioma cell survival, invasion, and stemness; inflammatory triggering properties; increased sensitivity to temozolomide; macrophage infiltration; support neo-angiogenesis | [ |
| IDH | Promotes tumor-infiltrating lymphocytes, less antitumor T-cell response; higher expression of PD-L1 | [ |
| IDH1mut | Favorable response to chemotherapy and radiation; reduced IFN-γ and CD8; less antitumor T-cell response | [ |
| ATRX | Mutation: stabilization of the glioma cell; deletion: promotes expression of (type I) interferon | [ |
| KIAA1549-BRAF fusion | BRAF activation promotes pro-cancerogenic senescence via a p16 (INK4a) pathway, pro-cancerogenic TME via the CCL2/CCR2 axis; microglia recruitment | [ |
| NF1 | NF1 incompetence: decreased cancer cell homogeneity; enhanced NF1 expression: diminished microglia activity; NF1 deactivation: increased macrophage activation | [ |
| PTEN | PTEN mutation: immunosuppressive TME; PDL-1 enhancement; increased T-cell apoptosis in the presence of PTEN-deficient glioblastoma cells; absence of PTEN: immune resistance; PTEN deficiency: promoting cross-linking of proteins; supports VEGF | [ |
| MGMT | Hypermethylation: better therapy response, promoted by hypoxic TME; reduced in presence of decreased Wnt-signaling; methylations seem to influences immune response | [ |
| p53 | Dysfunction: cell invasion and migration of glioma cells and supports inflammatory processes; loss: pro-cancerogenic activities of SASP, resulting in immunosuppressive TME; activation: immune invigoration | [ |
| CDK4/6 | Dysfunction: promotes phosphorylation of RB1, resulting in glioma cells’ division; lack of CDK4; prevents glioma cell development | [ |
| RB1 | Mutation: increased glioma cell proliferation rate | [ |
| HIF | Upregulation of VEGF and IL-8; support stem cell presence; reduction of IFN-y and TNF | [ |
Abbreviations: EGFR, epidermal growth factor receptor (vIII, variant III); IDH1, isocitrate dehydrogenase-(1) (mut, mutation; wt, wild type); ATRX, transcriptional regulator ATRX also known as ATP-dependent helicase ATRX (-mut, mutation); KIAA1549-BRAAF, KIAA1549 (protein-coding gene); NF1, neurofibromatosis type 1; PTEN, phosphatase and tensin homolog; MGMT, O6-methylguanine–DNA methyltransferase; p53, tumor protein P53 or tumor suppressor p53; CDK4/6, cyclin-dependent kinase 4 and 6; RB1, RB transcriptional corepressor 1; HIF, hypoxia-inducible factor
Fig. 2Crossroads between molecular patterns and tumor microenvironment. A diverse mechanism influences the interactions between tumor microenvironment and heterogenous molecular parameters of glioma. In this figure, the basic interactions are shown. A pro-carcinogen tumor microenvironment is promoted by an impairment of NF-gene that leads to microglia recruitment, but also BRAF promotes recruiting via CCL2. EGFR also causes a pro-cancerogenic tumor microenvironment via CCL2 by activating monocytes, whereas the recruitment of T-cells and dendritic cells supports a pro-inflammatory tumor microenvironment. EGFRvIII also activates NMDA receptors that support cell migration through glutamate release. Via CCl2 also BRAF induces microglia recruitment. IDH1-mut and ATRX promote IFN-y and CD8+ extracellular and IDH1-mut reduce intracellular PD-L1. In contrast, IDH1-wt promotes cell death. PTEN is crucial for tumor microenvironment composition. Deficiency of PTEN leads to increased matrix cross-linking proteins, which supports angiogenesis (also via VEGF activation) and glioma migration and tumor-infiltrating macrophages. Sufficient PTEN leads to a pro-immunological tumor microenvironment (details in the text). Abbreviations: ATRX, transcriptional regulator ATRX also known as ATP-dependent helicase ATRX (-mut, mutation); BRAF, proto-oncogene B-Raf; CCL(2), CC-chemokine-ligand-(2); EGFR, epidermal growth factor receptor (vIII, variant III); IDH1, isocitrate dehydrogenase-(1) (mut, mutation; wt, wild type); HIF-1α, hypoxia-inducible factor 1-alpha; IL-6, interleukin 6; IL-8, interleukin 8; INFy, interferon gamma; NF1, neurofibromatosis type 1; NF-κB, nuclear factor “kappa-light-chain-enhancer” of activated B-cells; NMDA, N-methyl-d-aspartate; PD-L1, programmed death-ligand 1; PTEN, phosphatase and tensin homolog; TME, tumor microenvironment; TNF-(α), tumor necrosis factor (alpha); VEGF, vascular endothelial growth factor
Fig. 3Hypoxic glioblastoma tumor microenvironment and molecular interactions. A hypoxic tumor microenvironment TME influences molecular biological processes in the glioma cell on several levels. Methylation of the MGMT, VEGF, and p53-protein are activated, which reduces the effect of alkylating agents and promotes angiogenesis. p53 is also the central regulator of p21 and CDK4/D1, which reduce microglia recruitment. A malfunction of p53 leads to increased glycoprotein concentration in the TME, which supports cell migration and immune evasion, and immunosuppression (details in the text). Abbreviations: BRAF, proto-oncogene B-Raf; CD133, CD133–prominin 1, PROM1, is a transmembrane protein; CDK4/6, cyclin-dependent kinase 4 and 6; D1, cyclin D1 protein; EGFR, epidermal growth factor receptor (vIII, variant III); HIF-1α, hypoxia-inducible factor 1-alpha; HIF-2α, hypoxia-inducible factor 2-alpha; MGMT, O6-methylguanine–DNA methyltransferase; INFy, interferon gamma; mTOR, mechanistic target of rapamycin; P21, cyclin-dependent kinase inhibitor 1 or CDK-interacting protein 1; P53, tumor protein P53 or tumor suppressor p53; RB1, RB transcriptional corepressor 1; SASP, senescence-associated secretory phenotype; TME, tumor microenvironment; TNF-(α), tumor necrosis factor (alpha); VEGF, vascular endothelial growth factor; WNT, Wnt signaling pathway; xc−, antiporter system xc−
Representative clinical trials of immunotherapies for glioblastoma
| Approach | Phase | Completed/ongoing | Sample size | PFS(m) | OS(m) | Year published | References |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| I | Completed | 3 | NR | 11 | 2015 | [ | |
| Assessment of the feasibility and safety of cellular immunotherapy utilizing ex vivo expanded autologous CD8-positive T-cell clones genetically modified to express the IL-13 zetakine chimeric immunoreceptor and the Hy/TK selection/suicide fusion protein in patients with recurrent or refractory, high-grade malignant glioma | |||||||
| I | Completed | 16 | 3.5 | 24.5 | 2017 | [ | |
| To evaluate the safety of escalating doses of autologous CMV-specific cytotoxic T-lymphocytes (CTL) genetically modified to express chimeric antigen receptors targeting the HER2 molecule in patients with HER2-positive glioblastoma multiforme, who have recurrent or progressive disease after front line therapy | |||||||
| I | Completed | 19 | 8.2 | 13.3 | 2014 | [ | |
| Assessment of the safety and tolerability of autologous CMV-specific T-cell therapy for recurrent GBM | |||||||
| III | Completed | 180 | 8.1 | 22.5 | 2017 | [ | |
| Assessment of the superiority of INNOCELL Corp. “Immuncell-LC” in aspects of therapeutic efficacy and safety when administered with temozolomide to glioblastoma patients when compared with the control group who did not receive administration of the drug | |||||||
| II | Completed | 72 | NR | 7/4 | 2012 | [ | |
| Assessment of the response of melanoma with brain metastases to ipilimumab treatment while maintaining acceptable tolerability | |||||||
| III | Active, not recruiting (last update posted: April 19, 2021) | NCT 02,017,717 | |||||
| Comparison of the efficacy and safety of nivolumab administered alone | |||||||
| III | Active, not recruiting (last update posted: February 3, 2021) | NCT02617589 | |||||
| Evaluation of patients with glioblastoma that is MGMT unmethylated (the MGMT gene is not altered by a chemical change). Comparison with patients receiving standard therapy with temozolomide in addition to radiation therapy (CheckMate498) | |||||||
| III | Active, not recruiting (last update posted: September 11, 2020) | NCT02667587 | |||||
| Evaluation of patients with glioblastoma that is MGMT methylated (the MGMT gene is altered by a chemical change). Patients will receive temozolomide plus radiation therapy. They will be compared to patients receiving nivolumab in addition to temozolomide plus radiation therapy (CheckMate548) | |||||||
| I | Completed | 45 | NR | 15.3 | 2016 | [ | |
| Aim of the study was to elucidate the side effects of vaccine therapy when administered together with temozolomide and radiation therapy in treating patients with newly diagnosed glioblastoma multiforme | |||||||
| II | Completed | 26 | 12.7 | 23.4 | 2017 | [ | |
| Investigation of efficacy and safety of autologous dendritic cell vaccination in glioblastoma multiforme patients after complete surgical resection with a fluorescence microscope | |||||||
| III | Completed | 745 | 8 | 20.1 | 2017 | [ | |
| Investigation whether adding of the experimental vaccine rindopepimut (also known as CDX-110) to the commonly used chemotherapy drug temozolomide can help improve the life expectancy of patients with newly diagnosed, resected EGFRvIII positive glioblastoma. CDX-110 was admixed with granulocyte macrophage-colony stimulating factor | |||||||
| II | Completed | 85 | 5.5 | 21.8 | 2015 | [ | |
| Evaluation of CDX-110 vaccination when given with standard of care treatment (maintenance temozolomide therapy). Study treatment was given until disease progression. Follow-up for long-term survival information. Efficacy was measured by the progression-free survival status at 5.5 months from the date of the first dose. CDX-110 was admixed with Granulocyte macrophage-colony stimulating factor | |||||||
| I | Completed | 20 | 23.1 | 25.5 | 2013 | [ | |
| Evaluation of immunological response, time to disease progression and survival time (time frame: five years) | |||||||
| I/II | Completed | 41 | 4.5 | 9.5 | 2014 | [ | |
| Investigation of the side effects and best dose of gp96 heat shock protein-peptide complex vaccine to see how well it works in treating patients with recurrent or progressive high-grade glioma over time | |||||||
| I | Completed | 9 | 17.6 | 86.6 | 2016 | [ | |
| Studying the side effects of vaccine therapy when given together with sargramostim in treating patients with malignant glioma | |||||||
| I/II | Completed | 11 | 25.3 | 41.1 | 2017 | [ | |
| Studying how well vaccine therapy works in treating patients with newly diagnosed glioblastoma multiforme recovering from lymphopenia caused by temozolomide | |||||||
| I | Completed | 11 | NR | 8.8 | 2016 | [ | |
| Aim was to test the safety of vaccination of cells called GM-K562 cells mixed with the participant’s own irradiated tumor cells | |||||||
| III | First results published | 331 | 34.7/19.8 | 2018 | [ | ||
Investigation of the efficacy of an investigational therapy called DCVax(R)-L in patients with newly diagnosed GBM for whom surgery is indicated (NCT00045968) Open-label expanded access to study for patients for whom the vaccine was manufactured during the Northwest Biotherapeutics’ 020,221 DCVax-L for GBM screening process, but they subsequently failed to meet specific enrollment criteria (NCT02146066) | |||||||
| I | Completed | 39 | 2021 | [ | |||
| Evaluation of safety and tolerability of and immune response to the IDH1 peptide vaccine in patients with IDH1R132H-mutated, WHO grade III–IV gliomas | |||||||
| I/I | Completed/recruiting (last update posted: September 28, 2021) | 37/ | 9.5/ | 2018/ | [ | ||
| Aim was to find the highest tolerable dose of DNX-2401 that can be injected directly into brain tumors and into the surrounding brain tissue where tumor cells can multiply. A second goal was to study how the new drug DNX-2401 affects brain tumor cells and the body in general | |||||||
| I/Ib | Recruiting (last update posted: May 21, 2021) | NCT02287428 | |||||
| Studying a new type of vaccine as a possible treatment for patients with glioblastoma. Tests the safety of an investigational intervention and tries to define the appropriate dose of the intervention to use for further studies | |||||||
| I/II | Active, not recruiting (last update posted: May 21, 2021); data are published | 61 | 12.5 | NCT01491893 | |||
| The aim is to determine the maximally tolerated dose (MTD) and the recommended phase 2 dose (RP2D) of PVSRIPO when delivered intracerebrally by convection-enhanced delivery (CED) | |||||||
Abbreviations: ACTRN, Australian clinical trials registration number; CMV, cytomegalovirus; CMV pp65, cytomegalovirus phosphoprotein 65 RNA; DCs, dendritic cells; EGFR: epidermal growth factor receptor (vIII: variant III); GBM: glioblastoma multiforme; GVAX, cancer vaccine composed of whole tumor cells; HSPPC-96, heat shock protein-peptide complexes 96; IDH, isocitrate dehydrogenase; MGMT, O6-methylguanine–DNA methyltransferase; NCT, ClinicalTrials.gov Identifier; OSm, overall survival (m, months); PFSm, progression-free survival (m, months); PVSRIPO, modified poliovirus. The status of the studies was last checked on September 28, 2021 (https://clinicaltrials.gov/)
Current therapy recommendations according to the EANO (European Association of Neuro-Oncology; 2020) for adult patients with common diffuse gliomas (table adapted to [160])
| Histopathological/molecular | Initial treatment at the time point of diagnosis | Treatment in case of progression or recurrence |
|---|---|---|
| Total gross resection is recommended whenever a safe operation is possible in all patients with newly diagnosed gliomas | Depending on tumor-board recommendation, a second surgery should be considered. The indication for a second radiation is controversial | |
| Glioblastoma, NOS WHO grade 4 | Temozolomide and radiotherapy (54–60 Gy in 1.8–2-Gy fractions) Age > 65–70 years and MGMT unmethylated glioblastoma: radiotherapy (40 Gy in 2.67-Gy fractions) Age > 65–70 years and MGMT methylated glioblastoma: temozolomide and radiotherapy or temozolomide | Nitrosourea and temozolomide. Possible approach with bevacizumab (depending on local availability) A radiotherapy can be initiated for patients that have been not previously treated with radiotherapy |
| Glioblastoma, IDH wild type, WHO grade 4; giant cell glioblastoma; gliosarcoma; epithelioid glioblastoma | Same recommendation as for NOS glioblastomas Tumor-treating fields remain controversial when they are used in a temozolomide maintenance setting (despite positive results in a phase III study) | Same recommendation as for NOS glioblastomas |
| Diffuse midline glioma, H3 K27M mutant, WHO grade 4 | Radiotherapy (54–60 Gy in 1.8–2-Gy fractions) and chemotherapy with temozolomide | Nitrosourea and temozolomide. Possible approach with bevacizumab (depending on local availability) |
| Diffuse hemispheric glioma, H3.3 G34 mutant, WHO grade 4 | Temozolomide and radiotherapy | Same recommendation as for diffuse midline glioma |
Abbreviations: Gy, gray; IDH, isocitrate dehydrogenase; MGMT, O6-methylguanine–DNA methyltransferase; NOS, not otherwise specified; WHO, World Health Organization
Fig. 4The interactions between TME and glioma cells are complex, as the multiple players of widespread origin show. Intracellular factors, pathways, cytokines, genetic alterations, or environmental properties are involved, and the molecular characteristics of glioma cells are dependent on these parameters. Furthermore, vice versa, the glioma molecular patterns influence the TME composition. The detailed interactions are listed in the text. Abbreviations: 1p19q, combined loss of the short-arm chromosome 1 (i.e., 1p) and the long-arm chromosome 19 (i.e., 19q); ATRX, transcriptional regulator ATRX also known as ATP-dependent helicase ATRX (-mut, mutation); BRAF (human gene that encodes a protein called B-Raf); CCL2, CC-chemokine-ligand-2; CCR2, C–C chemokine receptor type 2; CDK4/6, cyclin-dependent kinase 4 and 6; CD133, CD133–prominin 1, PROM1, is a transmembrane protein; EGFR, epidermal growth factor receptor (vIII, variant III); EVs, extracellular vesicles; IDH1, isocitrate dehydrogenase-(1) (mut, mutation; wt, wild type); IL-family, interleukin family; KIAA1549-BRAAF, KIAA1549 (protein-coding gene); LOX, lysyl oxidase, also known as protein-lysine 6-oxidase; MGMT, O6-methylguanine–DNA methyltransferase; mTOR, mechanistic target of rapamycin; NF1, neurofibromatosis type 1; NF-κB, nuclear factor “kappa-light-chain-enhancer” of activated B-cells; P53, tumor protein P53 or tumor suppressor p53; PD-L1, programmed death-ligand 1; PHD, prolyl hydroxylase domain enzymes; PTEN, phosphatase and tensin homolog; RAS, RAS proteins control signaling pathways that are key regulators of normal cell growth and malignant transformation; RB1, RB transcriptional corepressor 1; TME, tumor microenvironment; TNF, tumor necrosis factor; WNT, Wnt signaling pathway; antiporter system xc−