| Literature DB >> 35048030 |
Kamila J Bienkowska1, Christopher J Hanley1, Gareth J Thomas1,2.
Abstract
The role of the tumour microenvironement (TME) in cancer progression and resistance to therapies is now widely recognized. The most prominent non-immune cell type in the microenvironment of oral cancer (OSCC) is cancer-associated fibroblasts (CAF). Although CAF are a poorly characterised and heterogenous cell population, those with an "activated" myofibroblastic phenotype have been shown to support OSCC progression, promoting growth, invasion and numerous other "hallmarks of malignancy." CAF also confer broad resistance to different types of therapy, including chemo/radiotherapy and EGFR inhibitors; consistent with this, CAF-rich OSCC are associated with poor prognosis. In recent years, much CAF research has focused on their immunological role in the tumour microenvironment, showing that CAF shield tumours from immune attack through multiple mechanisms, and particularly on their role in promoting resistance to anti-PD-1/PD-L1 checkpoint inhibitors, an exciting development for the treatment of recurrent/metastatic oral cancer, but which fails in most patients. This review summarises our current understanding of CAF subtypes and function in OSCC and discusses the potential for targeting these cells therapeutically.Entities:
Keywords: cancer-associated fibroblasts; head & neck squamous cell carcinoma; myofibroblasts; oral cancer; tumour microenvironment
Year: 2021 PMID: 35048030 PMCID: PMC8757746 DOI: 10.3389/froh.2021.686337
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Oral Health ISSN: 2673-4842
Heterogeneity of CAF in oral cancer.
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| Puram et al. [ | HNSCC (oral cavity) | Myofibroblasts | ACTA2, MCAM, MYLK, MYL9, IL6, PDGFA |
| CAF | FAP, THY1, PDPN, MMP2, MMP11, PDGFRA/L, TGFB3. Could be further divided into CAF1 and CAF2 | ||
| Resting fibroblasts | Lack of activation markers | ||
| Patel et al. [ | Gingivobuccal–oral tumour | CAF1 (α-SMAlowBMP4+ve) | Increased proliferation of cancer cells; supressed self-renewal growth of oral-SLCC |
| CAF2 (α-SMAhighBMP4− | Negative correlation with cancer cells' proliferation; increased frequency of oral-SLCC | ||
| Costea et al. [ | OSCC | CAF-N | Motile; high production of hyaluronan; promoted invasion; secretome similar to the secretome of normal fibroblasts; |
| CAF-D | Less motile; high expression of TGF-β1; promoted invasion and EMT; secretome different from the secretome of normal fibroblasts | ||
| Hassona et al. [ | GS-OSCC | Non-senescent CAF | Non-senescent CAF failed to promote keratinocytes' invasion |
| GU-OSCC | Senescent CAF | Malignant keratinocytes induced fibroblast activation and senescence through ROS and TGF-β; senescent CAF promoted keratinocytes' invasion |
Figure 1A summary of pro-tumoural functions exerted by cancer-associated fibroblasts in oral cancer (Created with BioRender.com).
Figure 2CAF-targeting strategies. Combining immunotherapy-based treatmens (e.g., anti-PD-1/anti-PD-L1) with CAF-targeting, either through CAF “normalisation” (1) (e.g., NOX4 inhibitors), depletion (2) (e.g., FAP-based depletion) or through disrupting a signalling network between CAF and cancer cells/T-cells (e.g., via inhibition of CXCL12) (3). These strategies could improve the response to checkpoint immunotherapy and result in an increased infilitration of T-cells into tumours (4) (Created with BioRender.com).