| Literature DB >> 35409105 |
Saimeng Shi1,2,3,4, Longyun Ye1,2,3,4, Kaizhou Jin1,2,3,4, Zhiwen Xiao1,2,3,4, Xianjun Yu1,2,3,4, Weiding Wu1,2,3,4.
Abstract
Common pancreatic diseases have caused significant economic and social burdens worldwide. The interstitial microenvironment is involved in and plays a crucial part in the occurrence and progression of pancreatic diseases. Innate lymphoid cells (ILCs), an innate population of immune cells which have only gradually entered our visual field in the last 10 years, play an important role in maintaining tissue homeostasis, regulating metabolism, and participating in regeneration and repair. Recent evidence indicates that ILCs in the pancreas, as well as in other tissues, are also key players in pancreatic disease and health. Herein, we examined the possible functions of different ILC subsets in common pancreatic diseases, including diabetes mellitus, pancreatitis and pancreatic cancer, and discussed the potential practical implications of the relevant findings for future further treatment of these pancreatic diseases.Entities:
Keywords: diabetes mellitus; innate lymphoid cells; pancreatic cancer; pancreatitis
Mesh:
Year: 2022 PMID: 35409105 PMCID: PMC8998564 DOI: 10.3390/ijms23073748
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Mol Sci ISSN: 1422-0067 Impact factor: 5.923
Figure 1Development and the main features of ILC subsets. ILCs are derived from common lymphoid progenitors (CLPs) found within fetal liver and adult bone marrow. Dedicated TFs restrain B and T cell fates but guide the development of different ILC subsets. CLPs develop into common lymphoid progenitors (CILPs); then, through a series of transcriptional regulation processes, CILPs differentiate into natural killer cell precursor (NKPs) or common helper innate lymphoid progenitor (CHILPs), and the latter give rise to innate lymphoid cell precursor (ILCPs) and lymphoid tissue inducer progenitor (LTiPs). Each kind of precursor cell involves a branch in the ILC family. Based on the differential development trajectories and functions, the ILC family is categorized into five groups: NK cells, ILC1s, ILC2s, ILC3s and LTi cells. Each ILC subset secretes different effector cytokines that promote important physiological or pathological reactions.
Figure 2Role of ILCs in diabetes mellitus. A | ILCs in adipose tissue. In the lean state, IL-33 induces adipose-resident ILC2s to produce the cytokines IL-5 or IL-13, which support the recruitment and accumulation of eosinophils in AT. Eosinophils produce IL-4 to sustain and recruit AAMs. ILC2s produce ample IL 13 and may also directly contribute to AAM recruitment and maintenance. AAM byproducts, such as IL-10, contribute to adipocyte insulin sensitivity and protect against DM. In addition, IL-4, IL-13 and methionine-enkephalin peptides (MetEnk) and catecholamines, produced by eosinophils, ILC2s and AAMs, respectively, promote the proliferation and differentiation of adipocyte precursors into beige adipocytes. Beige fat biogenesis also promotes insulin sensitivity and prevents DM. In the obese state, while IL-12 promotes the selective accumulation of adipose-resident ILC1s. ILC1s drive CAM polarization by IFN-γ production and promote AT fibrosis, contributing to obesity-associated insulin resistance and DM. B | ILCs in pancreatic islets. In diabetic or obese states, the islets are also in an inflammatory background. IL-33 is produced by mesenchymal cells as a stress signal in islets. As the main IL-33-responsive cells in islets, islet-resident ILC2s stimulate the capacity of myeloid cells to produce RA, which in turn enhances insulin secretion in islet β cells and protects against DM. In the gut, the microbiota controls IL-22 expression by ILC3s within pancreatic islets through different pathways. ILC3-derived IL-22 induces islet β cells to produce β-defensin, preventing autoimmune diabetes.
Figure 3Role of ILCs in pancreatic cancer. ILCs may act as a double-edged sword in pancreatic cancer. In PC tissues, the frequencies of ILC2s and ILC3s are both significantly increased. Expanded by IL-33, ILC2s in PC potentially produce chemokine CCL5, which promote the recruitment and accumulation of CD103+ DCs in tumor tissues and further activate antitumor immunity in CD8+T cells. ILC2s express the PD-1, which restrains antitumor immunity. However, the PD-1 inhibition on ILC2 can be relieved by antibody-mediated PD-1 blockade, identifying ILC2s to be a potential, promising and brand-new target for anti-PD-1 immunotherapy. Unlike ILC2s, ILC3s promote the proliferation, metastasis and invasion of PC cells through IL-22/AKT signaling.
Animal studies identifying ILC subsets associated with pancreatic disease and therapy.
| Pancreatic Disease or Therapy | ILC Subsets | Located Tissue | The Role of ILCs | Future Perspective for Application and Treatment | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Diabetes mellitus | NK cell, ILC1 | Adipose tissue | Driven by IL-12 and STAT4 signaling, adipose NK cells and ILC1s proliferate and accumulate, contributing to obesity-related insulin resistance. | Blocking the IL-12/IL-12R/STAT4 signaling pathway in adipose NK cells and ILC1s may prevent the occurrence of type 2 diabetes mellitus. | [ |
| Diabetes mellitus | NK cell, ILC1 | Adipose tissue | Lnk/Sh2b3 gene regulate the IL-15/JAK3/STAT5 signaling pathway in adipose NK cells and ILC1s to inhibit the cell number and activity, thereby reducing the risk of diabetes mellitus. Missense variants of Lnk/Sh2b3 gene may contribute to diabetes mellitus. | Blocking the IL-15/JAK3/STAT5 signaling pathway in adipose NK cells and ILC1s may prevent diabetes mellitus caused by Lnk/Sh2b3 gene missense variation. | [ |
| Diabetes mellitus | ILC2 | Adipose tissue | IL-33 is required to maintain the ILC2s in the white adipose tissue, and ILC2s promote the beiging of white adipose tissue and limit obesity and obesity-related diabetes mellitus. | Providing or maintaining adequate IL-33 and ILC2s to promote beiging of white adipose tissue may be a novel approach to prevent or treat obesity-associated diabetes mellitus. | [ |
| Diabetes mellitus | ILC2 | Pancreatic islet | IL-33-activated islet-resident ILC2s promote insulin secretion. However, IL-33-ILC2 axis is defective in islets during obesity and is activated following acute β cell stress. | Selectively activation of IL-33-ILC2 axis in islet may offer therapy for diabetes mellitus. | [ |
| Diabetes mellitus | ILC3 | Pancreatic islet | Gut microbiota-regulated islet-resident ILC3s secrete IL-22 to support pancreatic endocrine cells to express β-defensin 14, preventing autoimmune diabetes. | Increasing the secretion of ILC3-derived IL-22 in islets via the intestinal pathways may prevent autoimmune diabetes. | [ |
| Pancreatic cancer | ILC2 | Pancreas | ILC2s emerge as antitumor immune cells for pancreatic cancer treatment and partly enhance the therapeutic effect of anti-PD-1 immunotherapy. | Blocking PD-1 signaling pathway on tumor-infiltrating ILC2s may promote antitumor effects and pancreatic cancer immunotherapy. | [ |
| Islet transplantation | ILC2 | Pancreatic islet | ILC2s prolong islet allograft survival in an IL-10-dependent manner. | Local delivery of ILC210 could be a promising tool to promote long-term islet graft survival. | [ |
Human clinical studies identifying ILC subsets associated with pancreatic disease and their possible roles.
| Pancreatic Disease | ILC Subsets | Located Tissue | The Role of ILCs | Future Perspective for Application and Treatment | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Diabetes mellitus | ILC1 | Adipose tissue | ILC1s promote adipose tissue fibrosis and diabetes mellitus in obesity. | Inhibiting the accumulation of adipose ILC1s may attenuate adipose tissue fibrogenesis and protect against type 2 diabetes mellitus. | [ |
| Diabetes mellitus | ILC1 | Peripheral blood | In patients with type 2 diabetes mellitus, ILC1s are significantly increased in the peripheral blood, and a higher ILC1 level indicates a 13.481-fold greater risk of diabetes mellitus. | Circulating ILC1s can be a good indicator of type 2 diabetes mellitus. | [ |
| Diabetes mellitus | ILC2 | Peripheral blood | DR3 induce human ILC2s to express type 2 cytokines and prevent type 2 diabetes mellitus. | DR3 agonist may be a novel, promising and worth exploring therapeutic avenue for type 2 diabetes mellitus. | [ |
| Pancreatitis | NK cell | peripheral blood | In acute pancreatitis patients, NK cell frequency correlates positively with amylase and lipase concentration, as well as the length of hospital stay. | Changes of NK cell level in peripheral blood can act as an auxiliary diagnosis indicator for acute pancreatitis. | [ |
| Pancreatic cancer | ILC2 | pancreas | PD-1+ tumor ILC2s and PD-1+ T cells coexist in nearly 60% of human pancreatic ductal adenocarcinomas and show a significant correlation. | ILC2s may be conducive to the clinical curative effect of PD-1 therapy. | [ |
| Pancreatic cancer | ILC3 | pancreas | Higher ILC3 frequency in tumor tissue is closely associated with tumor cell proliferation, vascular invasion, and distant metastasis in human pancreatic cancer. Subsequent in vitro experiments demonstrated that ILC3s promote the pancreatic cancer development through IL-22/IL-22R-AKT signaling pathway. | Use of neutralizing IL-22 antibody, IL-22R antibody or AKT inhibitor to block the IL-22/IL-22R-AKT signaling pathway may be an effective therapy for pancreatic cancer. | [ |