Katakai Tomoya
Department of Immunology, Niigata University Graduate School of Medical and Dental Sciences, Niigata, Japan.
Front Oncol. 2023 Jan 24;13:1088129. doi: 10.3389/fonc.2023.1088129. eCollection 2023.
The role of B cells in antitumor immunity has been reported to be either promotive or suppressive, but the specific mechanism remains to be comprehensively understood. However, this complicated situation likely depends on the temporal and spatial relationship between the developing tumor and B cells that recognize tumor antigens. Unlike responses against microbial or pathogenic infections, tumor cells are derived from autologous cells that have mutated and become aberrant; thus, elimination by the adaptive immune system is essentially inefficient. If tumor cells can evade immune attack at an early stage, non-destructive responses, such as tolerance and immunosuppression, are established over time. In tumor-draining lymph nodes (TDLNs), tumor antigen-reactive B cells potentially acquire immunoregulatory phenotypes and contribute to an immunosuppressive microenvironment. Therefore, triggering and enhancing antitumor responses by immunotherapies require selective control of these regulatory B cell subsets in TDLNs. In contrast, B cell infiltration and formation of tertiary lymphoid structures in tumors are positively correlated with therapeutic prognosis, suggesting that tumor antigen-specific activation of B cells and antibody production are advantageous for antitumor immunity in mid- to late-stage tumors. Given that the presence of B cells in tumor tissues may reflect the ongoing antitumor response in TDLNs, therapeutic induction and enhancement of these lymphocytes are expected to increase the overall effectiveness of immunotherapy. Therefore, B cells are promising targets, but the spatiotemporal balance of the subsets that exhibit opposite characteristics, that is, the protumor or antitumor state in TDLNs, should be understood, and strategies to separately control their functions should be developed to maximize the clinical outcome.
据报道,B细胞在抗肿瘤免疫中的作用既有促进作用,也有抑制作用,但其具体机制仍有待全面了解。然而,这种复杂的情况可能取决于正在发展的肿瘤与识别肿瘤抗原的B细胞之间的时空关系。与针对微生物或病原体感染的反应不同,肿瘤细胞源自发生突变并变得异常的自体细胞;因此,适应性免疫系统对其进行清除的效率本质上很低。如果肿瘤细胞能够在早期逃避免疫攻击,随着时间的推移,就会建立起诸如耐受和免疫抑制等非破坏性反应。在肿瘤引流淋巴结(TDLN)中,肿瘤抗原反应性B细胞可能获得免疫调节表型,并促成免疫抑制微环境。因此,通过免疫疗法触发和增强抗肿瘤反应需要对TDLN中的这些调节性B细胞亚群进行选择性控制。相反,肿瘤中的B细胞浸润和三级淋巴结构的形成与治疗预后呈正相关,这表明B细胞的肿瘤抗原特异性激活和抗体产生对中晚期肿瘤的抗肿瘤免疫是有利的。鉴于肿瘤组织中B细胞的存在可能反映了TDLN中正在进行的抗肿瘤反应,对这些淋巴细胞进行治疗性诱导和增强有望提高免疫治疗的整体效果。因此,B细胞是很有前景的靶点,但应了解表现出相反特征的亚群的时空平衡,即TDLN中的促肿瘤或抗肿瘤状态,并应制定分别控制其功能的策略,以最大限度地提高临床疗效。