| Literature DB >> 34992609 |
Maoyu Xiao1, Jun He2, Liyang Yin1, Xiguan Chen1, Xuyu Zu1, Yingying Shen1.
Abstract
Drug resistance is one of the most critical challenges in breast cancer (BC) treatment. The occurrence and development of drug resistance are closely related to the tumor immune microenvironment (TIME). Tumor-associated macrophages (TAMs), the most important immune cells in TIME, are essential for drug resistance in BC treatment. In this article, we summarize the effects of TAMs on the resistance of various drugs in endocrine therapy, chemotherapy, targeted therapy, and immunotherapy, and their underlying mechanisms. Based on the current overview of the key role of TAMs in drug resistance, we discuss the potential possibility for targeting TAMs to reduce drug resistance in BC treatment, By inhibiting the recruitment of TAMs, depleting the number of TAMs, regulating the polarization of TAMs and enhancing the phagocytosis of TAMs. Evidences in our review support it is important to develop novel therapeutic strategies to target TAMs in BC to overcome the treatment of resistance.Entities:
Keywords: breast cancer; drug resistance; drug therapy; targeting tumor-associated macrophages; tumor-associated macrophages
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2021 PMID: 34992609 PMCID: PMC8724912 DOI: 10.3389/fimmu.2021.799428
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Immunol ISSN: 1664-3224 Impact factor: 7.561
Figure 1Previous reports on drug resistant in BC treatment.
The molecular mechanism of TAM-mediated BC treatment resistance.
| Treatment Strategy | Drug Name | Signal Pathways | Cells/Tissues | TAMs responses | References |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
|
| Tamoxifen | PI3K/Akt/mTOR | MCF-7 | Secret CCL2 | ( |
| HIF-1α/STAT3 | T47D, MCF-7 | Polarize to M2 phenotype | ( | ||
| NF-Kb/STAT3/ERK | MCF-7 | Secret TNF-α and IL-6 | ( | ||
| NF-κB |
| Form crown-like structures (CLS) | ( | ||
| EGFR overexpression | patients with postmenopausal, ER-positive, Her-2-negative, infiltrating ductal carcinoma | Increase the infiltration | ( | ||
| AIs | Jagged1-Notch |
| Polarize to M2 phenotype | ( | |
| Increased expression of CXCR4 signal | MCF-7 | Increase the motility | ( | ||
| Others | Activation of c-Src, PKC and MAPK | MCF-7 | Secret factors | ( | |
| Akt/FOXO3a | TD47, MCF-7 | Secret TNF-α | ( | ||
|
| Doxorubicin (Adriamycin) | NF-κB | RAW264.7 | Secret IL-6 | ( |
| PTEN/Akt |
| Polarized to M2 phenotype | ( | ||
| IL-10R/STAT3/Bcl-2 | BT-20, | Secret IL-10 | ( | ||
| Paclitaxel | IL-10/STAT3/Bcl-2 | T47D, BT549 | Secret IL-10 | ( | |
| Unclear |
| High expression of cathepsin | ( | ||
| insulin/IGF1R | 4T1 | Secret IGF | ( | ||
| MAPK/ERK kinase (MEK) | TS1 | Secret factors | ( | ||
| Carboplatin | GJIC | T47D, | Direct cell–cell contacts | ( | |
| Others | High expression of CSF-1 | MCF-7 | Increase the recruitment | ( | |
| EGFR/STAT3/SOX2 | 4T07, 4T1 | Secret EGFR | ( | ||
|
| Olaparib | sterol regulatory element-binding protein 1 (SREBF1, SREBP1) |
| Glucose and lipid metabolic | ( |
| Lapatinib | Src/STAT3/ERK1/2-mediated EGFR signaling | SKBR3 | Secret IL-8 | ( | |
| Trastuzumab | B7-H4 expression was upregulated |
| Immunosuppressive phenotype | ( | |
| Bevacizumab | Fc-γ receptor and TLR4 |
| Polarize into M2b type | ( | |
| Eotaxin and Oncostatin M. | MDA-MB-231, MCF-7 | Polarize to M2 phenotype | ( | ||
| Vascular disrupting agents (VDAs) | CXCL12/CXCR4 axis | N202 | Increase the recruitment | ( | |
| Hedgehog inhibitor -Cyclopamine | Hedgehog pathway |
| M2 macrophages secret IL-6 | ( | |
| Ruxolitinib | JAK/STAT3 |
| Activation of JAK/STAT3 | ( | |
| BET inhibitor (JQ1) | IL-6 or IL-10/STAT3/IKBKE/NF-κB axis | MCF-7 | Secret IL-6 and IL-10 | ( | |
| PI3K inhibitor- GDC-0941 | NF-κB | 4T1 | Secret cytokines and chemokines | ( | |
| Sorafenib | Unclear |
| Increase the recruitment | ( | |
|
| CTLA-4 inhibitor | MSP-RON |
| High expression of PD-L1 | ( |
| CD40 agonist | Unclear |
| High expression of PD-L1 | ( | |
| Anti-PD-1 antibody | High expression of TYRO3 | 4T1 | Reduce the ratio of M1/M2 TAMs | ( | |
| Other | CD47-SIRPα |
| High expression of SIRPα | ( |
Figure 2Major mechanisms of endocrine therapy resistance in BC in connection with TAMs.
Figure 3Major mechanisms of chemotherapy resistance in BC in connection with TAMs.
Figure 4Major mechanisms of targeted therapy resistance in BC in connection with TAMs.
Figure 5Major mechanisms of immunotherapy resistance in BC in connection with TAMs. The immunotherapy resistance is also associated with T cell.
Targeted TAMs to overcome therapeutic resistance strategies.
| Target TAMs to overcome therapeutic resistance strategies | Concrete methods | References |
|---|---|---|
|
| Use TG100-115, the PI3Kγ selective inhibitor | ( |
| Interference with the CXCL12/CXCR4 axis | ( | |
| The plasmid DNA encoding the CCL2 trap (pCCL2) | ( | |
| Anti-cath-D antibody treatment | ( | |
|
| Use the MAPK pathway inhibitors. | ( |
| Synthesize TAM-targeted probe (IRD-aCD206) | ( | |
|
| The agonist of STING receptors nanoparticle-incorporated cGAMP (cGAMP-NP) | ( |
| MCT-1 antagonists | ( | |
| Block CSF1/CSF1R axis | ( | |
| Photoimmunotherapy (PIT) using near-infrared-exposed Cetuximab-targeted gold nanorods (CTX-AuNR) | ( | |
| Intratumoral injection of IL-21 | ( | |
| EED-IFNγ, an scFv protein containing an engineered effector domain (EED). | ( | |
| Z-GP-DA VLBH through GM-CSF to induce repolarization of TAMs to the M1phenotype. | ( | |
| Activation of Toll-like receptor 4 (TLR4) | ( | |
| Furin-responsive aggregated drug delivery system AuNPs-D&H-R&C | ||
| PC1/3-knockdown | ( | |
|
| Cetuximab-treated and cyclophosphamide treated (CTX-treated) combined with anti-EGFR therapy. | ( |
| Inhibit B7-H4 | ( | |
| Metformin induces miR‐708‐mediated suppression of CD47 | ( | |
|
| Block Eotaxin/Oncostatin M | ( |
| Construct a stimulus-responsive multifunctional nano-platform (ZIF-PQ-PDA-AUN) | ( | |
| Use HA-coated PEiPLGA-MTX nanoparticles (NPs) | ( | |
| CD47 blockade combined with Cowpea Mosaic Virus Nanoparticle (CPMV) | ( | |
|
| Use the tea nanoparticles (TNPs) | ( |
| Use the AXL inhibitors | ( |