| Literature DB >> 35669776 |
Muhammad Sajid1,2, Lianxin Liu1, Cheng Sun1,2,3,4.
Abstract
Hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) remains an important complication of chronic liver disease, especially when cirrhosis occurs. Existing treatment strategies include surgery, loco-regional techniques, and chemotherapy. Natural killer cells are distinctive cytotoxic lymphocytes that play a vital role in fighting tumors and infections. As an important constituent of the innate immune system against cancer, phenotypic and functional deviations of NK cells have been demonstrated in HCC patients who also exhibit perturbation of the NK-activating receptor/ligand axis. The rate of recurrence of tumor-infiltrating and circulating NK cells are positively associated with survival benefits in HCC and have prognostic significance, suggesting that NK cell dysfunction is closely related to HCC progression. NK cells are the first-line effector cells of viral hepatitis and play a significant role by directly clearing virus-infected cells or by activating antigen-specific T cells by producing IFN-γ. In addition, chimeric antigen receptor (CAR) engineered NK cells suggest an exclusive opportunity to produce CAR-NKs with several specificities with fewer side effects. In the present review, we comprehensively discuss the innate immune landscape of the liver, particularly NK cells, and the impact of tumor immune microenvironment (TIME) on the function of NK cells and the biological function of HCC. Furthermore, the role of NK cells in HCC and HBV-induced HCC has also been comprehensively elaborated. We also elaborate on available NK cell-based immunotherapeutic approaches in HCC treatment and summarize current advancements in the treatment of HCC. This review will facilitate researchers to understand the importance of the innate immune landscape of NK cells and lead to devising innovative immunotherapeutic strategies for the systematic treatment of HCC.Entities:
Keywords: HBV induced HCC; HCC; NK cells; innate immune landscape; tumor immune microenvironment
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2022 PMID: 35669776 PMCID: PMC9165341 DOI: 10.3389/fimmu.2022.887186
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Immunol ISSN: 1664-3224 Impact factor: 8.786
Figure 1The general overview of the role of NK cells in HCC and HBV-induced HCC. An overview of important cells, cytokines, ligands, and their receptors involved in HCC growth and development. As an important part of our immune system, NK cells play an important role in different stages of HCC development. Their functions are mainly regulated by interactions with other immune cells such as macrophages and dendritic cells, which are mediated by different types of cytokines, ligands, and their receptors. Macrophages and dendritic cells stimulate NK cells by secreting pro-inflammatory cytokines such as IL-12, IL-15, and IL-18. Together with the above-mentioned cytokines and ligands, IL-2, type I IFN, and TLR ligands further stimulate and increase NK cell cytotoxicity. Upon activation, NK cells secrete pro-inflammatory cytokines and induce hepatic stellate cell apoptosis and HBV lysis using Fas/FasL and granzyme/perforin-mediated mechanisms. NKG2D is a significantly important receptor that is activated upon binding to its ligand MICA/B and subsequently leads to enhancing the cytotoxicity of NK cells and blocking STAT3. All of these lead to apoptosis of HCC cells and prevent HCC progression and metastasis.
Figure 2The Impact of Tumor Immune Microenvironment (TIME) on the function of NK cells and the biological function of HCC. MDSCs stimulate differentiation and development of Tregs during tumorigenesis; suppress NK and DCs cells through TGF-β, dispossess amino acids, such as L-cysteine and L-arginine, and produce oxidative stress and the microenvironment becomes hypoxic and leads to HCC progression.
NK Cell based Therapeutic Approaches.
| Treatment Approaches | Mechanism | References | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Chemotherapeutics | Polysaccharide SEP | Act through TLR2/TLR4 and activate NK cells and T lymphocytes and enhance antitumor activity | ( |
| Gemcitabine (GEM) | the cytolytic activity of NK-92 cells by inhibiting ADAM10 and upregulating MICA expression and reducing sMICA secretion | ( | |
| Sunitinib | upregulate of NKG2DLs, through non-canonical pathways of NF-kb signaling, apoptotic, and DNA damage repair genes | ( | |
| Muromonab-CD3 | together with the causes enhanced natural killer cell activation and T lymphocyte exhaustion | ( | |
| Sorafenib | initiates the pro-inflammatory activity of tumor-associated macrophages. stimulation of antitumor natural killer cell responses in a cytokine and NF-kB dependent manner. | ( | |
| Activation of Natural killer cell in the hepatic portal system enhance cytotoxicity of IL-12l and IL-12A | |||
| Regorafenib | multi-kinase inhibitor anticancer drug suppressing c-RAF, c-KIT, RET, TIE-2, PDGFR, BRAF, VEGFR1-3, FGFR-1, and p38 MAP kinases | ( | |
| CAR-NK Based Therapeutic Approaches | Glypican-3 (GPC3)-specific CAR-NK-92 | greater antitumor and cytotoxicity activity against HCC xenografts | ( |
| Basigin | Kills malignant HCC in patient derived tumors and mouse xenograft model | ( | |
|
| Enhanced antitumor activity in combination with different cytokines | ( | |
| Immunotherapeutics | TRAIL | inhibit hepatocellular carcinoma | ( |
| TLR7 and TLR8 agonists | enhance the efficiency of NK cell-based immune surveillance through stimulating NK-DC crosstalk which lead to type I IFN and IL-12 dependent enhancement of NK cell function, and enhanced antitumor immune response to HCC | ( | |
| chimeric NKG2D-CD3ζ-DAP10 receptor | increased the signaling capability of the NKG2D receptor, resulting in increased cytotoxic activity of the expanded natural killer cells | ( | |
| Antimicrobials and novel treatment | Anisomycin | novel therapeutic HCC drug that controls CD58, ICAM4, lymphocyte-associated antigen 3 and MHC-1, to improve immunity and acts as an immunological synapse between HCC and natural killer cells | ( |
| Lomofungin | antifungal agent that reduces activity of ADAM17 and then reduced sMICA activity in a dose-dependent manner | ( | |
| HDACI trichostatin A | enhancing cytotoxicity of NK cell in HCC through transcriptional regulation of RAET1G and ULBP1 and enhance apoptosis of HCC cells | ( | |
| Gastrodin | causes increased cytotoxicity of natural killer cells and CD8+ T lymphocytes | ( | |
| Mellitin | antitumor, antibacterial, antiarthritic, and anti-inflammatory characteristics. | ( | |
| Mel-P15 | initiate cytotoxicity of NK cells and potentiates TNF-α, IFN-γ and IL-2 secretion | ( |