Mao Chih-Ping, Hung Chien-Fu, Wu T-C
Department of Pathology, Johns Hopkins School of Medicine, Baltimore, MD 21231, USA.
J Biomed Sci. 2007 Jan;14(1):15-29. doi: 10.1007/s11373-006-9131-5. Epub 2006 Nov 14.
The human immune system is comprised of several types of cells that have the potential to eradicate tumors without inflicting damage on normal tissue. Over the past decade, progress in the understanding of tumor biology and immunology has offered the exciting possibility of treating malignant disease with vaccines that exploit the capacity of T cells to effectively and selectively kill tumor cells. However, the immune system frequently fails to mount a successful defense against cancers despite vaccination with tumor-associated antigens. The ability of these vaccines to generate an abundant supply of armed effector T cells is often limited by immunoregulatory signaling pathways that suppress T cell activation. In addition, many tumors create a local microenvironment that inhibits the function of T cells. The attenuation of these pathways, which facilitate the evasion of tumors from immune surveillance, thus represents a potentially effective approach for cancer immunotherapy. Specifically, it may be of interest to modify the properties of dendritic cells, T cells, and tumor cells to downregulate the expression of proteins that diminish the immune response to cancers. RNA interference (RNAi) techniques have developed into a highly effective means of intracellular gene 'knockdown' and may be successfully employed in this way to improve cancer immunotherapies. This strategy has recently been explored both in vitro and in vivo, and has generated significantly enhanced antitumor immunity in numerous studies. Nevertheless, several practical concerns remain to be resolved before RNAi technology can be implemented safely and efficiently in humans. As novel developments and discoveries in molecular biology rapidly continue to unfold, it is likely that this technology may soon translate into a potent form of gene silencing in the clinic with profound applications to cancer immunotherapy.
人类免疫系统由几种类型的细胞组成,这些细胞有能力根除肿瘤而不损害正常组织。在过去十年中,对肿瘤生物学和免疫学的理解取得了进展,这为利用T细胞有效且选择性地杀死肿瘤细胞的能力,通过疫苗治疗恶性疾病提供了令人兴奋的可能性。然而,尽管接种了肿瘤相关抗原疫苗,免疫系统仍常常无法成功抵御癌症。这些疫苗产生大量武装效应T细胞的能力,往往受到抑制T细胞活化的免疫调节信号通路的限制。此外,许多肿瘤会形成抑制T细胞功能的局部微环境。这些促进肿瘤逃避免疫监视的信号通路的减弱,因此代表了一种潜在有效的癌症免疫治疗方法。具体而言,改变树突状细胞、T细胞和肿瘤细胞的特性,以下调降低对癌症免疫反应的蛋白质的表达,可能是有意义的。RNA干扰(RNAi)技术已发展成为一种高效的细胞内基因“敲低”手段,并可成功用于改善癌症免疫治疗。最近在体外和体内都对该策略进行了探索,并且在众多研究中产生了显著增强的抗肿瘤免疫力。然而,在RNAi技术能够在人类中安全有效地实施之前,仍有几个实际问题有待解决。随着分子生物学的新发展和新发现迅速不断涌现,这项技术很可能很快会在临床上转化为一种强大的基因沉默形式,并在癌症免疫治疗中具有深远的应用。