Garrido Federico, Ruiz-Cabello Francisco, Aptsiauri Natalia
Servicio de Análisis Clínicos e Inmunología, UGC Laboratorio Clínico, Hospital Universitario Virgen de las Nieves, Av. Fuerzas Armadas s/n, Granada, Spain.
Instituto de Investigación Biosanitaria ibs.Granada, Granada, Spain.
Cancer Immunol Immunother. 2017 Feb;66(2):259-271. doi: 10.1007/s00262-016-1947-x. Epub 2016 Dec 31.
Most tumor cells derive from MHC-I-positive normal counterparts and remain positive at early stages of tumor development. T lymphocytes can infiltrate tumor tissue, recognize and destroy MHC class I (MHC-I)-positive cancer cells ("permissive" phase I). Later, MHC-I-negative tumor cell variants resistant to T-cell killing emerge. During this process, tumors first acquire a heterogeneous MHC-I expression pattern and finally become uniformly MHC-I-negative. This stage (phase II) represents a "non-permissive" encapsulated structure with tumor nodes surrounded by fibrous tissue containing different elements including leukocytes, macrophages, fibroblasts, etc. Molecular mechanisms responsible for total or partial MHC-I downregulation play a crucial role in determining and predicting the antigen-presenting capacity of cancer cells. MHC-I downregulation caused by reversible ("soft") lesions can be upregulated by TH1-type cytokines released into the tumor microenvironment in response to different types of immunotherapy. In contrast, when the molecular mechanism of the tumor MHC-I loss is irreversible ("hard") due to a genetic defect in the gene/s coding for MHC-I heavy chains (chromosome 6) or beta-2-microglobulin (B2M) (chromosome 15), malignant cells are unable to upregulate MHC-I, remain undetectable by cytotoxic T-cells, and continue to grow and metastasize. Based on the tumor MHC-I molecular analysis, it might be possible to define MHC-I phenotypes present in cancer patients in order to distinguish between non-responders, partial/short-term responders, and likely durable responders. This highlights the need for designing strategies to enhance tumor MHC-I expression that would allow CTL-mediated tumor rejection.
大多数肿瘤细胞来源于MHC-I阳性的正常对应细胞,并在肿瘤发展的早期阶段保持阳性。T淋巴细胞可以浸润肿瘤组织,识别并破坏MHC-I阳性的癌细胞(“允许性”I期)。后来,出现了对T细胞杀伤具有抗性的MHC-I阴性肿瘤细胞变体。在此过程中,肿瘤首先获得异质性的MHC-I表达模式,最终变为均匀的MHC-I阴性。这个阶段(II期)代表一种“非允许性”的包囊结构,肿瘤结节被含有包括白细胞、巨噬细胞、成纤维细胞等不同成分的纤维组织包围。负责全部或部分MHC-I下调的分子机制在确定和预测癌细胞的抗原呈递能力方面起着关键作用。由可逆性(“软性”)病变引起的MHC-I下调可通过针对不同类型免疫疗法释放到肿瘤微环境中的TH1型细胞因子上调。相反,当由于编码MHC-I重链(6号染色体)或β2-微球蛋白(B2M)(15号染色体)的基因存在遗传缺陷导致肿瘤MHC-I丢失的分子机制不可逆(“硬性”)时,恶性细胞无法上调MHC-I,无法被细胞毒性T细胞检测到,并继续生长和转移。基于肿瘤MHC-I分子分析,有可能确定癌症患者中存在的MHC-I表型,以区分无反应者、部分/短期反应者和可能的持久反应者。这突出了设计增强肿瘤MHC-I表达策略的必要性,这将允许CTL介导的肿瘤排斥反应。