Kuo Peiwen, Bratman Scott V, Shultz David B, von Eyben Rie, Chan Cato, Wang Ziwei, Say Carmen, Gupta Aparna, Loo Bill W, Giaccia Amato J, Koong Albert C, Diehn Maximilian, Le Quynh-Thu
Department of Radiation Oncology, Stanford University School of Medicine, Stanford, California.
University of California, San Diego School of Medicine, La Jolla, California.
Clin Cancer Res. 2014 Nov 1;20(21):5558-69. doi: 10.1158/1078-0432.CCR-14-1138. Epub 2014 Sep 4.
Radiotherapy can result in lymphopenia, which has been linked to poorer survival. Here, we test the hypothesis that radiotherapy-induced lymphopenia is mediated by a tumor-secreted factor, Galectin-1 (Gal-1), which possesses T-cell proapoptotic activities.
Matched Gal-1 wild-type (WT) or null mice were implanted with Lewis lung carcinoma (LLC-1) that either expressed Gal-1 or had Gal-1 stably downregulated. Tumors were irradiated locally and circulating Gal-1 and T cells were measured. Tumor growth, lung metastasis, intratumoral T-cell apoptosis, and microvessel density count were quantified. Thiodigalactoside (TDG), a Gal-1 inhibitor, was used to inhibit Gal-1 function in another group of mice to validate the observations noted with Gal-1 downregulation. Lymphocyte counts, survival, and plasma Gal-1 were analyzed in cohorts of radiotherapy-treated lung [non-small cell lung cancer (NSCLC)] and head and neck cancer patients.
LLC irradiation increased Gal-1 secretion and decreased circulating T cells in mice, regardless of host Gal-1 expression. Inhibition of tumor Gal-1 with either shRNA or thiodigalactoside ablated radiotherapy-induced lymphopenia. Irradiated shGal-1 tumors showed significantly less intratumoral CD8(+) T-cell apoptosis and microvessel density, which led to marked tumor growth delay and reduced lung metastasis compared with controls. Similar observations were made after thiodigalactoside treatment. Radiotherapy-induced lymphopenia was associated with poorer overall survival in patients with NSCLC treated with hypofractionated radiotherapy. Plasma Gal-1 increased whereas T-cell decreased after radiation in another group of patients.
Radiotherapy-related systemic lymphopenia appeared to be mediated by radiotherapy-induced tumor Gal-1 secretion that could lead to tumor progression through intratumoral immune suppression and enhanced angiogenesis.
放射治疗可导致淋巴细胞减少,这与较差的生存率相关。在此,我们检验以下假说:放射治疗诱导的淋巴细胞减少是由肿瘤分泌因子半乳凝素-1(Gal-1)介导的,该因子具有T细胞促凋亡活性。
将匹配的Gal-1野生型(WT)或基因敲除小鼠植入表达Gal-1或Gal-1稳定下调的Lewis肺癌(LLC-1)。对肿瘤进行局部照射,并测量循环中的Gal-1和T细胞。对肿瘤生长、肺转移、肿瘤内T细胞凋亡和微血管密度计数进行定量分析。在另一组小鼠中使用半乳凝素-1抑制剂硫代二半乳糖苷(TDG)抑制Gal-1功能,以验证Gal-1下调时的观察结果。对接受放射治疗的肺癌[非小细胞肺癌(NSCLC)]和头颈癌患者队列的淋巴细胞计数、生存率和血浆Gal-1进行分析。
无论宿主Gal-1表达如何,LLC照射均增加小鼠Gal-1分泌并减少循环T细胞。用短发夹RNA(shRNA)或硫代二半乳糖苷抑制肿瘤Gal-1可消除放射治疗诱导的淋巴细胞减少。与对照组相比,照射后的shGal-1肿瘤显示肿瘤内CD8(+)T细胞凋亡和微血管密度显著降低,这导致明显的肿瘤生长延迟和肺转移减少。硫代二半乳糖苷治疗后也有类似观察结果。在接受大分割放射治疗的NSCLC患者中,放射治疗诱导的淋巴细胞减少与较差的总生存率相关。在另一组患者中,放疗后血浆Gal-1升高而T细胞减少。
放射治疗相关的全身性淋巴细胞减少似乎是由放射治疗诱导的肿瘤Gal-1分泌介导的,这可能通过肿瘤内免疫抑制和增强血管生成导致肿瘤进展。