Carlsen Lindsey, Zhang Shengliang, Tian Xiaobing, De La Cruz Arielle, George Andrew, Arnoff Taylor E, El-Deiry Wafik S
Laboratory of Translational Oncology and Experimental Cancer Therapeutics, Warren Alpert Medical School, Brown University, Providence, RI, United States.
Department of Pathology and Laboratory Medicine, Warren Alpert Medical School, Brown University, Providence, RI, United States.
Front Mol Biosci. 2023 Aug 1;10:1148389. doi: 10.3389/fmolb.2023.1148389. eCollection 2023.
p53 is a transcription factor that regulates the expression of genes involved in tumor suppression. p53 mutations mediate tumorigenesis and occur in approximately 50% of human cancers. p53 regulates hundreds of target genes that induce various cell fates including apoptosis, cell cycle arrest, and DNA damage repair. p53 also plays an important role in anti-tumor immunity by regulating TRAIL, DR5, TLRs, Fas, PKR, ULBP1/2, and CCL2; T-cell inhibitory ligand PD-L1; pro-inflammatory cytokines; immune cell activation state; and antigen presentation. Genetic alteration of p53 can contribute to immune evasion by influencing immune cell recruitment to the tumor, cytokine secretion in the TME, and inflammatory signaling pathways. In some contexts, p53 mutations increase neoantigen load which improves response to immune checkpoint inhibition. Therapeutic restoration of mutated p53 can restore anti-cancer immune cell infiltration and ameliorate pro-tumor signaling to induce tumor regression. Indeed, there is clinical evidence to suggest that restoring p53 can induce an anti-cancer immune response in immunologically cold tumors. Clinical trials investigating the combination of p53-restoring compounds or p53-based vaccines with immunotherapy have demonstrated anti-tumor immune activation and tumor regression with heterogeneity across cancer type. In this Review, we discuss the impact of wild-type and mutant p53 on the anti-tumor immune response, outline clinical progress as far as activating p53 to induce an immune response across a variety of cancer types, and highlight open questions limiting effective clinical translation.
p53是一种转录因子,可调节参与肿瘤抑制的基因表达。p53突变介导肿瘤发生,约50%的人类癌症中会出现该突变。p53调节数百个靶基因,这些基因可诱导多种细胞命运,包括细胞凋亡、细胞周期停滞和DNA损伤修复。p53还通过调节TRAIL、DR5、TLR、Fas、PKR、ULBP1/2和CCL2;T细胞抑制性配体PD-L1;促炎细胞因子;免疫细胞激活状态;以及抗原呈递,在抗肿瘤免疫中发挥重要作用。p53的基因改变可通过影响免疫细胞向肿瘤的募集、肿瘤微环境中的细胞因子分泌以及炎症信号通路,导致免疫逃逸。在某些情况下,p53突变会增加新抗原负荷,从而提高对免疫检查点抑制的反应。突变p53的治疗性恢复可恢复抗癌免疫细胞浸润,并改善促肿瘤信号传导以诱导肿瘤消退。事实上,有临床证据表明,恢复p53可在免疫冷肿瘤中诱导抗癌免疫反应。研究恢复p53的化合物或基于p53的疫苗与免疫疗法联合使用的临床试验表明,不同癌症类型存在异质性的抗肿瘤免疫激活和肿瘤消退。在本综述中,我们讨论了野生型和突变型p53对抗肿瘤免疫反应的影响,概述了激活p53以在多种癌症类型中诱导免疫反应的临床进展,并强调了限制有效临床转化的悬而未决的问题。