Verner James Michael, Arbuthnott Harry Frederick, Ramachandran Raghavskandhan, Bharadwaj Manini, Chaudhury Natasha, Jou Eric
Robinson College, University of Cambridge, CB3 9AN Cambridge, United Kingdom.
Medical Sciences Division, Oxford University Hospitals, OX3 9DU Oxford, United Kingdom.
Explor Target Antitumor Ther. 2024;5(2):296-315. doi: 10.37349/etat.2024.00219. Epub 2024 Apr 23.
Innate lymphoid cells (ILCs) are the most recently discovered class of innate immune cells found to have prominent roles in various human immune-related pathologies such as infection and autoimmune diseases. However, their role in cancer was largely unclear until recently, where several emerging studies over the past few years unanimously demonstrate ILCs to be critical players in tumour immunity. Being the innate counterpart of T cells, ILCs are potent cytokine producers through which they orchestrate the overall immune response upstream of adaptive immunity thereby modulating T cell function. Out of the major ILC subsets, ILC1s have gained significant traction as potential immunotherapeutic candidates due to their central involvement with the anti-tumour type 1 immune response. ILC1s are potent producers of the well-established anti-tumour cytokine interferon γ (IFNγ), and exert direct cytotoxicity against cancer cells in response to the cytokine interleukin-15 (IL-15). However, in advanced diseases, ILC1s are found to demonstrate an exhausted phenotype in the tumour microenvironment (TME) with impaired effector functions, characterised by decreased responsiveness to cytokines and reduced IFNγ production. Tumour cells produce immunomodulatory cytokines such as transforming growth factor β (TGFβ) and IL-23, and through these suppress ILC1 anti-tumour actfivities and converts ILC1s to pro-tumoural ILC3s respectively, resulting in disease progression. This review provides a comprehensive overview of ILC1s in tumour immunity, and discusses the exciting prospects of harnessing ILC1s for cancer immunotherapy, either alone or in combination with cytokine-based treatment. The exciting prospects of targeting the upstream innate immune system through ILC1s may surmount the limitations associated with adaptive immune T cell-based strategies used in the clinic currently, and overcome cancer immunotherapeutic resistance.
固有淋巴细胞(ILCs)是最近发现的一类固有免疫细胞,在各种人类免疫相关疾病(如感染和自身免疫性疾病)中发挥着重要作用。然而,直到最近,它们在癌症中的作用在很大程度上仍不清楚,过去几年的几项新出现的研究一致表明ILCs是肿瘤免疫中的关键参与者。作为T细胞的固有对应物,ILCs是强大的细胞因子产生者,通过它们在适应性免疫上游协调整体免疫反应,从而调节T细胞功能。在主要的ILC亚群中,ILC1s作为潜在的免疫治疗候选者受到了极大的关注,因为它们在抗肿瘤1型免疫反应中起着核心作用。ILC1s是成熟的抗肿瘤细胞因子干扰素γ(IFNγ)的强大生产者,并在细胞因子白细胞介素-15(IL-15)的作用下对癌细胞发挥直接细胞毒性作用。然而,在晚期疾病中,发现ILC1s在肿瘤微环境(TME)中表现出耗竭的表型,效应功能受损,其特征是对细胞因子的反应性降低和IFNγ产生减少。肿瘤细胞产生免疫调节细胞因子,如转化生长因子β(TGFβ)和IL-23,并分别通过这些因子抑制ILC1的抗肿瘤活性,并将ILC1转化为促肿瘤的ILC3,从而导致疾病进展。本综述全面概述了ILC1s在肿瘤免疫中的作用,并讨论了单独或与基于细胞因子的治疗联合利用ILC1s进行癌症免疫治疗的令人兴奋的前景。通过ILC1s靶向上游固有免疫系统的令人兴奋的前景可能克服目前临床上使用的基于适应性免疫T细胞策略的局限性,并克服癌症免疫治疗耐药性。