Ananth Abhirami A, Tai Lee-Hwa, Lansdell Casey, Alkayyal Almohanad A, Baxter Katherine E, Angka Leonard, Zhang Jiqing, Tanese de Souza Christiano, Stephenson Kyle B, Parato Kelley, Bramson Jonathan L, Bell John C, Lichty Brian D, Auer Rebecca C
Center for Innovative Cancer Research, Ottawa Hospital Research Institute, Ottawa, ON, Canada.
Department of Biochemistry, Microbiology and Immunology, University of Ottawa, Ottawa, ON, Canada.
PLoS One. 2016 May 19;11(5):e0155947. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0155947. eCollection 2016.
Anti-tumor CD8+ T cells are a key determinant for overall survival in patients following surgical resection for solid malignancies. Using a mouse model of cancer vaccination (adenovirus expressing melanoma tumor-associated antigen (TAA)-dopachrome tautomerase (AdDCT) and resection resulting in major surgical stress (abdominal nephrectomy), we demonstrate that surgical stress results in a reduction in the number of CD8+ T cell that produce cytokines (IFNγ, TNFα, Granzyme B) in response to TAA. This effect is secondary to both reduced proliferation and impaired T cell function following antigen binding. In a prophylactic model, surgical stress completely abrogates tumor protection conferred by vaccination in the immediate postoperative period. In a clinically relevant surgical resection model, vaccinated mice undergoing a positive margin resection with surgical stress had decreased survival compared to mice with positive margin resection alone. Preoperative immunotherapy with IFNα significantly extends survival in surgically stressed mice. Importantly, myeloid derived suppressor cell (MDSC) population numbers and functional impairment of TAA-specific CD8+ T cell were altered in surgically stressed mice. Our observations suggest that cancer progression may result from surgery-induced suppression of tumor-specific CD8+ T cells. Preoperative immunotherapies aimed at targeting the prometastatic effects of cancer surgery will reduce recurrence and improve survival in cancer surgery patients.
抗肿瘤CD8+ T细胞是实体恶性肿瘤患者手术切除后总体生存的关键决定因素。利用癌症疫苗接种小鼠模型(表达黑色素瘤肿瘤相关抗原(TAA)-多巴色素互变异构酶的腺病毒(AdDCT))以及导致重大手术应激的切除手术(腹部肾切除术),我们证明手术应激导致响应TAA产生细胞因子(IFNγ、TNFα、颗粒酶B)的CD8+ T细胞数量减少。这种效应继发于抗原结合后增殖减少和T细胞功能受损。在预防性模型中,手术应激在术后即刻完全消除了疫苗接种赋予的肿瘤保护作用。在临床相关的手术切除模型中,与仅进行阳性切缘切除的小鼠相比,经历阳性切缘切除且伴有手术应激的接种疫苗小鼠的生存期缩短。术前用IFNα进行免疫治疗可显著延长手术应激小鼠的生存期。重要的是,手术应激小鼠的髓源性抑制细胞(MDSC)数量以及TAA特异性CD8+ T细胞的功能损伤发生了改变。我们的观察结果表明,癌症进展可能源于手术诱导的肿瘤特异性CD8+ T细胞抑制。旨在针对癌症手术的促转移作用的术前免疫疗法将减少癌症手术患者的复发并提高生存率。