Yazdanifar Mahboubeh, Zhou Ru, Mukherjee Pinku
Department of Biological Sciences, University of North Carolina at Charlotte, 9201 University City Boulevard, Charlotte, NC 28223, USA.
Curr Trends Immunol. 2016;17:95-115.
More than 80% of all cancers arise from epithelial cells referred to as carcinomas. Adenocarcinomas are the most common type of carcinomas arising from the specialized epithelial cells that line the ducts of our major organs. Despite many advances in cancer therapies, metastatic and treatment-refractory cancers remain the 2 leading cause of death. Immunotherapy has offered potential opportunities with specific targeting of tumor cells and inducing remission in many cancer patients. Numerous therapies using antibodies as antagonists or checkpoint inhibitors/immune modulators, peptide or cell vaccines, cytokines, and adoptive T cell therapies have been developed. The most innovative immunotherapy approach so far has been the use of engineered T cell, also referred to as chimeric antigen receptor T cells (CAR-T cells). CAR-T cells are genetically modified naïve T cells that express a chimeric molecule which comprises of the antigen-recognition domains (scFv) of an anti-tumor antibody and one, two, or three intracellular signaling domains of the T cell receptor (TCR). When these engineered T cells recognize and bind to the tumor antigen target the scFv fragment, a signal is sent to the intracellular TCR domains of the CAR, leading to activation of the T cells to become cytolytic against the tumor cells. CAR-T cell therapy has shown tremendous success for certain hematopoietic malignancies, but this success has not been extrapolated to adenocarcinomas. This is due to multiple factors associated with adenocarcinoma that are different from hematopoietic tumors. Although many advances have been made in targeting multiple cancers by CAR-T cells, clinical trials have shown adverse effects and toxicity related to this treatment. New strategies are yet to be devised to manage side effects associated with CAR-T cell therapies. In this review, we report some of the promising immunotherapeutic strategies being developed for treatment of most common adenocarcinomas with particular emphasis on the future generation of CAR-T cell therapy.
超过80%的癌症起源于上皮细胞,即所谓的癌。腺癌是最常见的癌类型,起源于我们主要器官导管内衬的特化上皮细胞。尽管癌症治疗取得了许多进展,但转移性和难治性癌症仍然是两大主要死因。免疫疗法通过特异性靶向肿瘤细胞并使许多癌症患者缓解,提供了潜在的机会。已经开发了许多使用抗体作为拮抗剂或检查点抑制剂/免疫调节剂、肽或细胞疫苗、细胞因子以及过继性T细胞疗法的治疗方法。迄今为止,最具创新性的免疫疗法是使用工程化T细胞,也称为嵌合抗原受体T细胞(CAR-T细胞)。CAR-T细胞是经过基因改造的初始T细胞,表达一种嵌合分子,该分子由抗肿瘤抗体的抗原识别域(scFv)和T细胞受体(TCR)的一个、两个或三个细胞内信号域组成。当这些工程化T细胞识别并结合肿瘤抗原靶点scFv片段时,信号会传递到CAR的细胞内TCR域,导致T细胞激活,对肿瘤细胞产生细胞毒性。CAR-T细胞疗法在某些血液系统恶性肿瘤中已显示出巨大成功,但这种成功尚未推广到腺癌。这是由于与腺癌相关的多种因素与血液系统肿瘤不同。尽管CAR-T细胞在靶向多种癌症方面取得了许多进展,但临床试验表明这种治疗存在不良反应和毒性。尚未设计出新的策略来管理与CAR-T细胞疗法相关的副作用。在本综述中,我们报告了一些正在开发的用于治疗最常见腺癌的有前景的免疫治疗策略,特别强调了下一代CAR-T细胞疗法。