Rangel Leticia B A, Agarwal Rachana, Sherman-Baust Cheryl A, Mello-Coelho Valeria de, Pizer Ellen S, Ji Hongxiu, Taub Dennis D, Morin Patrice J
Laboratory of Cellular and Molecular Biology, Gerontology Research Center, National Institute on Aging, Baltimore, Maryland 21224, USA.
Cancer Biol Ther. 2004 Oct;3(10):1021-7. doi: 10.4161/cbt.3.10.1142. Epub 2004 Oct 2.
Tumor formation in immunocompetent hosts is believed to be dependent on the ability of tumor cells to evade the immune system, as suggested by the alterations of expression of the major histocompatibility complex (MHC) and related molecules in a number of cancers. Our previous serial analysis of gene expression (SAGE) study revealed that HLA-DRA (encoding the alpha chain of HLA-DR) is one of the most highly overexpressed genes in ovarian cancer. This finding was unanticipated, as overexpression of MHC molecules would be expected to increase tumor immunogenicity, therefore compromising tumor growth. We have now examined the expression of HLA-DR alpha chain in ovarian and a variety of other cancers using tissue arrays and found it overexpressed in a majority of the cancer tissues investigated. In contrast, the HLA-DR beta chain, which together with the alpha chain forms the functional HLA-DR complex, was not frequently found expressed in cancer, resulting to a lack of mature HLA-DR in these tissues. Interestingly, HLADRA and HLADRB transcripts were both found expressed in many other cancer types, including ovarian cancer, suggesting that the downregulation of HLADR beta chain is a post-transcriptional or post-translational mechanism. In addition, we observed high levels of the invariant chain (Ii/CD74) expression in both the cytoplasm and plasma membrane of ovarian tumor cells, possibly contributing to the lack of mature HLA-DR protein expression. Interestingly, we found that IFN-gamma could induce mature HLA-DR at the surface of normal ovarian cells, while this ability was reduced in tumor cells. Together, these data suggest that, while ovarian tumors overexpress HLA-DR alpha, perhaps as a result of inflammatory events in the tumor microenvironment, the tumor cells may have compensatory mechanisms to reduce the production of functional MHC class II molecules, thus reducing immunogenicity and favoring tumor growth. In addition, because of its ubiquitous expression in ovarian and other cancers, HLA-DR alpha may represent a novel biomarker for malignancy.
正如许多癌症中主要组织相容性复合体(MHC)及相关分子表达的改变所表明的那样,免疫功能正常宿主中的肿瘤形成被认为依赖于肿瘤细胞逃避免疫系统的能力。我们之前的基因表达系列分析(SAGE)研究表明,HLA-DRA(编码HLA-DR的α链)是卵巢癌中过度表达最为显著的基因之一。这一发现出乎意料,因为MHC分子的过度表达预期会增加肿瘤免疫原性,从而不利于肿瘤生长。我们现在使用组织芯片检测了HLA-DRα链在卵巢癌和其他多种癌症中的表达,发现它在大多数所研究的癌组织中均有过度表达。相比之下,与α链共同形成功能性HLA-DR复合体的HLA-DRβ链在癌症中并不常见表达结果导致这些组织中缺乏成熟的HLA-DR。有趣的是,在包括卵巢癌在内的许多其他癌症类型中均发现HLADRA和HLADRB转录本都有表达,这表明HLADRβ链的下调是一种转录后或翻译后机制。此外,我们观察到卵巢肿瘤细胞的细胞质和质膜中均有高水平的恒定链(Ii/CD74)表达,这可能导致成熟HLA-DR蛋白表达缺失。有趣的是,我们发现干扰素-γ可诱导正常卵巢细胞表面出现成熟的HLA-DR,而肿瘤细胞的这种能力则有所降低。综合这些数据表明,虽然卵巢肿瘤可能由于肿瘤微环境中的炎症事件而过度表达HLA-DRα,但肿瘤细胞可能具有补偿机制来减少功能性MHC II类分子的产生,从而降低免疫原性并有利于肿瘤生长。此外,由于HLA-DRα在卵巢癌和其他癌症中普遍表达,它可能代表一种新的恶性肿瘤生物标志物。