scholarly journals Local Interleukin-12 Treatment Enhances the Efficacy of Radiation Therapy by Overcoming Radiation-Induced Immune Suppression

2021 ◽  
Vol 22 (18) ◽  
pp. 10053
Author(s):  
Ching-Fang Yu ◽  
Chun-Hsiang Chang ◽  
Chun-Chieh Wang ◽  
Ji-Hong Hong ◽  
Chi-Shiun Chiang ◽  
...  

Radiation therapy (RT) recruits myeloid cells, leading to an immunosuppressive microenvironment that impedes its efficacy against tumors. Combination of immunotherapy with RT is a potential approach to reversing the immunosuppressive condition and enhancing tumor control after RT. This study aimed to assess the effects of local interleukin-12 (IL-12) therapy on improving the efficacy of RT in a murine prostate cancer model. Combined treatment effectively shrunk the radioresistant tumors by inducing a T helper-1 immune response and influx of CD8+ T cells. It also delayed the radiation-induced vascular damage accompanied by increased α-smooth muscle actin-positive pericyte coverage and blood perfusion. Moreover, RT significantly reduced the IL-12-induced levels of alanine aminotransferase in blood. However, it did not further improve the IL-12-induced anti-tumor effect on distant tumors. Upregulated expression of T-cell exhaustion-associated genes was found in tumors treated with IL-12 only and combined treatment, suggesting that T-cell exhaustion is potentially correlated with tumor relapse in combined treatment. In conclusion, this study illustrated that combination of radiation and local IL-12 therapy enhanced the host immune response and promoted vascular maturation and function. Furthermore, combination treatment was associated with less systemic toxicity than IL-12 alone, providing a potential option for tumor therapy in clinical settings.

PLoS ONE ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 16 (7) ◽  
pp. e0254243
Author(s):  
Meritxell Llorens-Revull ◽  
Maria Isabel Costafreda ◽  
Angie Rico ◽  
Mercedes Guerrero-Murillo ◽  
Maria Eugenia Soria ◽  
...  

Background & aims HCV CD4+ and CD8+ specific T cells responses are functionally impaired during chronic hepatitis C infection. DAAs therapies eradicate HCV infection in more than 95% of treated patients. However, the impact of HCV elimination on immune responses remain controversial. Here, we aimed to investigate whether HCV cure by DAAs could reverse the impaired immune response to HCV. Methods We analyzed 27 chronic HCV infected patients undergoing DAA treatment in tertiary care hospital, and we determined the phenotypical and functional changes in both HCV CD8+ and CD4+ specific T-cells before and after viral clearance. PD-1, TIM-3 and LAG-3 cell-surface expression was assessed by flow cytometry to determine CD4+ T cell exhaustion. Functional responses to HCV were analyzed by IFN-Ɣ ELISPOT, intracellular cytokine staining (IL-2 and IFN-Ɣ) and CFSE-based proliferation assays. Results We observed a significant decrease in the expression of PD-1 in CD4+ T-cells after 12 weeks of viral clearance in non-cirrhotic patients (p = 0.033) and in treatment-naive patients (p = 0.010), indicating a partial CD4 phenotype restoration. IFN-Ɣ and IL-2 cytokines production by HCV-specific CD4+ and CD8+ T cells remained impaired upon HCV eradication. Finally, a significant increase of the proliferation capacity of both HCV CD4+ and CD8+ specific T-cells was observed after HCV elimination by DAAs therapies. Conclusions Our results show that in chronically infected patients HCV elimination by DAA treatment lead to partial reversion of CD4+ T cell exhaustion. Moreover, proliferative capacity of HCV-specific CD4+ and CD8+ T cells is recovered after DAA’s therapies.


Blood ◽  
2010 ◽  
Vol 116 (21) ◽  
pp. 143-143
Author(s):  
Zhi-Zhang Yang ◽  
Deanna Grote ◽  
Steven Ziesmer ◽  
Toshiro Niki ◽  
Mitsuomi Hirashima ◽  
...  

Abstract Abstract 143 IL-12 induces IFN-g production and contributes to anti-tumor immunity. However, administration of IL-12 in cancer patients has resulted in a limited clinical benefit. In follicular B-cell lymphoma (FL), a clinical trial of IL-12 in combination with rituximab showed a lower response rate in patients treated with the combination than in patients treated with rituximab alone (Clin Cancer Res 2006), suggesting that, in contrast to the observations in vitro or in vivo in mice, IL-12 actually plays a detrimental role in FL patients. Recently, a type of immune response, termed “ T cell exhaustion” describing a condition in which T cells exhibit reduced differentiation, proliferation, and effector function, has been shown to impair anti-tumor immunity and result in disease progression. TIM-3, a family member of T-cell immunoglobulin and mucin domian-containing proteins, inhibits TH1-mediated immune response and promotes immunological tolerance. A recent study has suggested that TIM-3 may play an important role in mediating T cell exhaustion. However, the biological and clinical relevance of TIM-3 in cancers remains completely unknown. In this study, we determined whether T cell exhaustion exists in the tumor microenvironment, whether IL-12 contributes to T cell exhaustion, and whether TIM-3-mediated T cell exhaustion impacts patient outcome in FL. We found that serum IL-12 levels were elevated in FL patients compared to healthy individuals (median: 0.50 ng/ml, n=30 vs 0.32 ng/ml, n=22; p= 0.03) and that elevated serum IL-12 levels were associated with a poor outcome in these patients when treated with rituximab alone as initial therapy. Using 0.56 ng/ml as a cutoff, patients with serum IL-12 levels of greater than 0.56 ng/ml had a significantly shorter time to progression than patients with IL-12 levels less than 0.56 ng/ml (12 months versus 40 months; p=0.001). Both lymphoma B cells and monocytes were able to produce IL-12 and contributed to elevated serum levels of IL-12 in FL. Importantly, we found that IL-12 strongly induced TIM-3 expression in a dose-dependent manner. Endogenous production of IL-12 by lymphoma B cells and monocytes was capable of regulating TIM-3 expression on T cells from FL. As a consequence, TIM-3 was highly expressed on a subset of T cells from PBMCs or lymph nodes from FL patients while its expression was negligible or moderate on T cells from normal PBMCs or benign lymph nodes, respectively. The number of TIM-3-expressing T cells accounted for approximately 32% and 39% of CD4+ or CD8+ T cells in biopsy specimens and 6.2% and 6.7% in peripheral blood of FL patients. TIM-3+ T cells, co-expressed with PD-1, exhibited a reduced ability to proliferate and decreased cytokine production compared to TIM-3- T cells. Similarly, IL-12-induced TIM-3+ T cells gradually lost the capacity to produce cytokines over a period of time. These results suggest that TIM-3-expressing T cells are functionally exhausted. In addition, TIM-3+ T cells were prone to apoptotic induction by its ligand galectin (Gal) -9. The phosphorylation of p38 was higher in TIM-3+ T cells compared to TIM-3- T cells when exposed to Gal-9, suggesting MAPK pathway was involved in Gal-9-mediated apoptosis of TIM-3+ T cells. Finally, increased numbers of intratumoral TIM-3-expressing cells were associated with a higher histological grade, higher LDH levels and a poor survival in FL patients. Taken together, these results indicate that IL-12, in contrast to its role in augmenting immune response through IFN-g, induces T cell exhaustion by upregulating TIM-3 expression. We further demonstrated that lymphoma B cells produce IL-12 thereby contributing to T cell exhaustion by promoting TIM-3 expression on intratumoral T cells. Impairment of anti-tumor immunity due to T cell exhaustion induced by the IL-12-TIM-3 pathway may account for the observation that high levels of serum IL-12 and increased number of TIM-3+CD4+ T cells correlate with a worse outcome in FL patients. These findings not only reveal a novel IL-12-TIM-3 pathway that plays an important role in impairing tumor immunity and detrimentally affecting prognosis in FL patients, but may have therapeutic potential for cancer patients. Disclosures: No relevant conflicts of interest to declare.


2016 ◽  
Vol 38 (3) ◽  
pp. 1171-1181 ◽  
Author(s):  
Asmae Gassa ◽  
Fu Jian ◽  
Halime Kalkavan ◽  
Vikas Duhan ◽  
Nadine Honke ◽  
...  

Background/Aims: Unexpected transmissions of viral pathogens during solid organ transplantation (SOT) can result in severe, life-threatening diseases in transplant recipients. Immune activation contributes to disease onset. However mechanisms balancing the immune response against transmitted viral infection through organ transplantation remain unknown. Methods & Results: Here we found, using lymphocytic choriomeningitis virus (LCMV), that transplantation of LCMV infected hearts led to exhaustion of virus specific CD8+ T cells, viral persistence in organs and survival of graft and recipient. Genetic depletion of Interleukin-10 (IL-10) resulted in strong immune activation, graft dysfunction and death of mice, suggesting that IL-10 was a major regulator of CD8+ T cell exhaustion during SOT. In the presence of memory CD8+ T cells, virus could be controlled. However sufficient antiviral immune response resulted in acute rejection of transplanted heart. Conclusion: We found that virus transmitted via SOT could not be controlled by naïve mice recipients due to IL-10 mediated CD8+ T cell exhaustion which thereby prevented immunopathology and graft failure whereas memory mice recipients were able to control the virus and induced graft failure.


Author(s):  
Chang-Yu Chen ◽  
Satoshi Ueha ◽  
Yoshiro Ishiwata ◽  
Shoji Yokochi ◽  
De Yang ◽  
...  

Cancers ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 13 (3) ◽  
pp. 515
Author(s):  
Sungmin Jung ◽  
Jea-Hyun Baek

T cell factor 1 (TCF1) is a transcription factor that has been highlighted to play a critical role in the promotion of T cell proliferation and maintenance of cell stemness in the embryonic and CD8+ T cell populations. The regulatory nature of TCF1 in CD8+ T cells is of great significance, especially within the context of T cell exhaustion, which is linked to the tumor and viral escape in pathological contexts. Indeed, inhibitory signals, such as programmed cell death 1 (PD-1) and cytotoxic-T-lymphocyte-associated protein 4 (CTLA-4), expressed on exhausted T lymphocytes (TEX), have become major therapeutic targets in immune checkpoint blockade (ICB) therapy. The significance of TCF1 in the sustenance of CTL-mediated immunity against pathogens and tumors, as well as its recently observed necessity for an effective anti-tumor immune response in ICB therapy, presents TCF1 as a potentially significant biomarker and/or therapeutic target for overcoming CD8+ T cell exhaustion and resistance to ICB therapy. In this review, we aim to outline the recent findings on the role of TCF1 in T cell development and discuss its implications in anti-tumor immunity.


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