| Literature DB >> 34830780 |
Rebecca Adams1, Bernhard Moser2, Sophia N Karagiannis1,3, Katie E Lacy1.
Abstract
The incidence of cutaneous malignant melanoma is rising globally and is projected to continue to rise. Advances in immunotherapy over the last decade have demonstrated that manipulation of the immune cell compartment of tumours is a valuable weapon in the arsenal against cancer; however, limitations to treatment still exist. Cutaneous melanoma lesions feature a dense cell infiltrate, coordinated by chemokines, which control the positioning of all immune cells. Melanomas are able to use chemokine pathways to preferentially recruit cells, which aid their growth, survival, invasion and metastasis, and which enhance their ability to evade anticancer immune responses. Aside from this, chemokine signalling can directly influence angiogenesis, invasion, lymph node, and distal metastases, including epithelial to mesenchymal transition-like processes and transendothelial migration. Understanding the interplay of chemokines, cancer cells, and immune cells may uncover future avenues for melanoma therapy, namely: identifying biomarkers for patient stratification, augmenting the effect of current and emerging therapies, and designing specific treatments to target chemokine pathways, with the aim to reduce melanoma pathogenicity, metastatic potential, and enhance immune cell-mediated cancer killing. The chemokine network may provide selective and specific targets that, if included in current therapeutic regimens, harbour potential to improve outcomes for patients.Entities:
Keywords: biomarkers; chemokines; immunotherapy; melanoma; targeted therapy; tumour pathogenicity
Year: 2021 PMID: 34830780 PMCID: PMC8615762 DOI: 10.3390/cancers13225625
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Cancers (Basel) ISSN: 2072-6694 Impact factor: 6.575
Chemokines in melanoma: chemokines, their receptors, the cells on which they are expressed, and their pro- and antitumour functions in melanoma. Citations refer to preclinical studies that have determined the expression and role of chemokines and their receptors in a melanoma context.
| Chemokine | Receptor | Ligand Expressed by | Receptor Expressed by | Protumour Effects | Antitumour Effects | Refs |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| CXCL1-3 | CXCR1 | Melanoma | Neutrophils | Tumour growth and survival | TILs recruitment | [ |
| CXCL5-7 | ||||||
| CXCL8 | Tumour initiation | |||||
| CXCL9-11 | CXCR3 | DCs | T eff cells | Transendothelial metastasis | TILs recruitment | [ |
| CXCL12 | CXCR4 | Melanoma | T eff cells | Metastasis—lung and liver | [ | |
| CCL2 | CCR2 | Melanoma | Monocytes | Tumour initiation | [ | |
| CCL3 | CCR1 | Melanoma | MDSCs | Immune evasion | [ | |
| CCL17 | CCR4 | Brain | Melanoma | Immune evasion | TILs recruitment | [ |
| CCL20 | CCR6 | TAMs | Melanoma | Innate cell recruitment | [ | |
| CCL19 | CCR7 | HEVs | Melanoma | Lymph node metastasis | Antigen presentation | [ |
| CCL1 | CCR8 | Melanoma | T regs | Immune evasion | [ | |
| CCL25 | CCR9 | Small bowel | Melanoma | Metastasis—bowel | [ | |
| CCL27 | CCR10 | Melanoma | Melanoma | Tumour cell survival | TILs recruitment | [ |
| CX3CL1 | CX3CR1 | Melanoma | T eff cells | Angiogenesis | TILs recruitment | [ |
Figure 1Chemokine networks in cutaneous melanoma. Immune cells are recruited via the networks outlined on the left of the figure. Chemokines enable an immunosuppressive microenvironment (TME) to be created via the preferential recruitment of immunosuppressive cells such as MDSCs, TAMs, and T-regs, which reduce the T-cell effector function and enhance the further recruitment and expansion of immunosuppressive cells. Cancer growth, invasion, and angiogenesis are promoted by the factors secreted by cells recruited to the TME via chemokines such as neutrophils and TAMs, as well as directly via CXCL8; lymphangiogenesis and lymph node metastasis are enabled through CXCL5/CXCR1-2 signalling, and cancer cells are able to migrate to lymph nodes using the CCL21/CCR7 pathway. EMT-like processes are enabled through CCL5 and CXCL5 signalling through their respective receptors. Transendothelial migration is promoted via the CXCL9-10/CXCR3 pathways, and cancer cells are able to move to specific sites using chemokine networks, e.g., CCL25/CCR9 to the gut, CCL22/CCR4 to the brain, and CXCL12 CXCR4 to the liver and lungs.
Current clinical trials targeting and monitoring chemokines in melanoma.
| Targeting Chemokines | ||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Target | Agent name | Type of agent | Melanoma Type | Phase | Aims/Outcomes | Trial |
| CXCR1/CXCR2 | SX-682 | Small molecule inhibitor | Stages 3 or 4 | 1 | Blocking recruitment of MDSCs | NCT03161431 |
| CXCR2 | Autologous TILs | CXCR2-transduced autologous TILs | Stages 3 or 4 | Pilot | Increased recruitment of TILs | NCT01740557 |
| Chemokine modulation | DCs, celecoxib, IFNa2b, rintatolimod | Autologous DCs + chemokine modulation | PD1/PD-L1-resistant | 2 | Increased immune response | NCT04093323 |
|
| ||||||
| TLR | CMP-001 + pembrolizumab | TLR9 agonist + anti-PD-1 antibody | Recent or current PD1/PD-L1 therapy | 1b | Activate DCs to augment immunotherapy | NCT02680184 |
| BRAF | Dabrafenib + trametinib | Neoadjuvant BRAFi | Stage 3 BRAF V600 mutant | 2 | Improve pathological response | NCT01972347 |
| Immune checkpoint | Immune checkpoint inhibitors | Immune checkpoint inhibitors | Stages 3 or 4 | N/A | Measuring chemokines and immune profile in tumour and peripheral blood to identify biomarkers for response to treatment | NCT04576429 |
| TILs | TBX-3400 | AT-MYC fusion protein | Stages 3 or 4 | 1 | Activate cytotoxic T cells | NCT03385486 |
| PD-1 | Anti-PD-1 antibody | All stages | 2 | Measuring chemokine profiles to identify biomarkers for response to treatment | NCT04928365 | |
| TILs | IL-2 | IL-2 | Any stage | 3 | Increase TILs recruitment | NCT03233828 |
| BRAF + immune checkpoint | Cobimetinib + vemurafenib + atezolizumab | BRAFi + anti-PD-L1-antibody + surgery | Stages 3 or 4 | 2 | Measuring chemokines and immune profile in tumour and peripheral blood to identify biomarkers for response to treatment | NCT04722575 |