Weiss Jonathan M, Subleski Jeff J, Wigginton Jon M, Wiltrout Robert H
National Cancer Institute, Cancer and Inflammation Program, Laboratory of Experimental Immunology, Center for Cancer Research, Frederick, MD 21702, USA.
Expert Opin Biol Ther. 2007 Nov;7(11):1705-21. doi: 10.1517/14712598.7.11.1705.
Cancer is a multi-faceted disease comprising complex interactions between neoplastic and normal cells. Over the past decade, there has been considerable progress in defining the molecular, cellular and environmental contributions to the pathophysiology of tumor development. Despite these advances, the conventional treatment of patients still generally involves surgery, radiotherapy and/or chemotherapy, and the clinical outcome for many of these efforts remains unsatisfactory. Recent studies have highlighted the feasibility of using immunotherapeutic approaches that seek to enhance host immune responses to developing tumors. These strategies include immunomodulatory cytokines, with TNF-alpha, type I or type II IFNs, IL-2, IL-12, IL-15 and IL-18 being among the most potent inducers of anti-tumor activity in a variety of preclinical studies. More recently, some exciting new cytokines have been characterized, such as IL-21, IL-23, IL-27 and their immunomodulatory and antitumor effects in vitro and in vivo suggest that they may have considerable promise for future immunotherapy protocols. The promise of cytokine therapy does indeed derive from the identification of these novel cytokines but even more fundamentally, the field is greatly benefiting from the ever-expanding amount of preclinical data that convincingly demonstrate synergistic and/or novel biologic effects, which may be achieved through the use of several combinations of cytokines with complementary immune-stimulating capabilities. One cytokine in particular, IL-12, holds considerable promise by virtue of the fact that it plays a central role in regulating both innate and adaptive immune responses, can by itself induce potent anticancer effects, and synergizes with several other cytokines for increased immunoregulatory and antitumor activities. This review discusses the antitumor activity of IL-12, with a special emphasis on its ability to synergize with other cytokines for enhancement of immune effector cell populations and regulation of host-tumor cell interactions and the overall tumor microenvironment.
癌症是一种多方面的疾病,由肿瘤细胞与正常细胞之间的复杂相互作用构成。在过去十年中,在确定分子、细胞和环境因素对肿瘤发生病理生理学的影响方面取得了显著进展。尽管有这些进展,但对患者的传统治疗通常仍包括手术、放疗和/或化疗,而且许多此类治疗的临床结果仍不尽人意。最近的研究突出了使用免疫治疗方法的可行性,这些方法旨在增强宿主对正在发展的肿瘤的免疫反应。这些策略包括免疫调节细胞因子,在各种临床前研究中,肿瘤坏死因子-α、I型或II型干扰素、白细胞介素-2、白细胞介素-12、白细胞介素-15和白细胞介素-18是最有效的抗肿瘤活性诱导剂。最近,一些令人兴奋的新细胞因子已被鉴定出来,如白细胞介素-21、白细胞介素-23、白细胞介素-27,它们在体外和体内的免疫调节和抗肿瘤作用表明,它们可能对未来的免疫治疗方案有很大的前景。细胞因子治疗的前景确实源于这些新型细胞因子的鉴定,但更根本的是,该领域正从不断增加的临床前数据中受益匪浅,这些数据令人信服地证明了协同和/或新的生物学效应,这可以通过使用几种具有互补免疫刺激能力的细胞因子组合来实现。特别是一种细胞因子白细胞介素-12,因其在调节先天性和适应性免疫反应中起核心作用、自身可诱导强大的抗癌作用以及与其他几种细胞因子协同作用以增强免疫调节和抗肿瘤活性而具有很大的前景。本综述讨论了白细胞介素-12的抗肿瘤活性,特别强调了其与其他细胞因子协同作用以增强免疫效应细胞群体以及调节宿主-肿瘤细胞相互作用和整体肿瘤微环境的能力。