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1.
Front Biosci (Landmark Ed) ; 27(2): 63, 2022 02 14.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35227006

ABSTRACT

Malignant melanoma recurrence remains heterogeneous in presentation, ranging from locoregional disease (i.e., local recurrence, satellites, in transit disease) to distant dermal and visceral metastases. This diverse spectrum of disease requires a personalized approach to management and has resulted in the development of both local (e.g., surgery, radiation, intralesional injection) and systemic (intravenous or oral) treatment strategies. Intralesional agents such as oncolytic viruses may also evoke local immune stimulation to induce and enhance the antitumor immune response. Further, it is hypothesized that these oncolytic viruses may convert immunologically "cold" tumors to more reactive "hot" tumor microenvironments and thereby overcome anti-PD-1 therapy resistance. Currently, talimogene laherparepvec (T-VEC), a modified herpes virus, is FDA-approved in this population, with many other oncolytic viruses under investigation in both preclinical and trial settings. Herein, we detail the scientific rationale, current landscape, and future directions of oncolytic viruses in melanoma.


Subject(s)
Melanoma , Oncolytic Virotherapy , Oncolytic Viruses , Skin Neoplasms , Humans , Immunotherapy/methods , Melanoma/pathology , Melanoma/therapy , Oncolytic Virotherapy/methods , Oncolytic Viruses/genetics , Skin Neoplasms/therapy , Tumor Microenvironment
2.
Cell Rep ; 27(5): 1434-1445.e3, 2019 04 30.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31042471

ABSTRACT

Chronic exposure to tumor-associated antigens inactivates cognate T cells, restricting the repertoire of tumor-specific effector T cells. This problem was studied here by transferring TCR transgenic CD4 T cells into recipient mice that constitutively express a cognate self-antigen linked to MHC II on CD11c-bearing cells. Immunotherapeutic agonists to CD134 plus CD137, "dual costimulation," induces specific CD4 T cell expansion and expression of the receptor for the Th2-associated IL-1 family cytokine IL-33. Rather than producing IL-4, however, they express the tumoricidal Th1 cytokine IFNγ when stimulated with IL-33 or IL-36 (a related IL-1 family member) plus IL-12 or IL-2. IL-36, which is induced within B16-F10 melanomas by dual costimulation, reduces tumor growth when injected intratumorally as a monotherapy and boosts the efficacy of tumor-nonspecific dual costimulated CD4 T cells. Dual costimulation thus enables chronic antigen-exposed CD4 T cells, regardless of tumor specificity, to elaborate tumoricidal function in response to tumor-associated cytokines.


Subject(s)
CD4-Positive T-Lymphocytes/immunology , Immunity, Innate , Immunotherapy, Adoptive/methods , Melanoma/therapy , Animals , Dendritic Cells/immunology , Female , Interferon-gamma/genetics , Interferon-gamma/metabolism , Interleukins/genetics , Interleukins/metabolism , Melanoma/immunology , Mice , Mice, Inbred C57BL
3.
Am J Physiol Heart Circ Physiol ; 316(6): H1480-H1494, 2019 06 01.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-30978132

ABSTRACT

Effector CD8 T cells infiltrate atherosclerotic lesions and are correlated with cardiovascular events, but the mechanisms regulating their recruitment and retention are not well understood. CD137 (4-1BB) is a costimulatory receptor induced on immune cells and expressed at sites of human atherosclerotic plaque. Genetic variants associated with decreased CD137 expression correlate with carotid-intimal thickness and its deficiency in animal models attenuates atherosclerosis. These effects have been attributed in part to endothelial responses to low and disturbed flow (LDF), but CD137 also generates robust effector CD8 T cells as a costimulatory signal. Thus, we asked whether CD8 T cell-specific CD137 stimulation contributes to their infiltration, retention, and IFNγ production in early atherogenesis. We tested this through adoptive transfer of CD8 T cells into recipient C57BL/6J mice that were then antigen primed and CD137 costimulated. We analyzed atherogenic LDF vessels in normolipidemic and PCSK9-mediated hyperlipidemic models and utilized a digestion protocol that allowed for lesional T-cell characterization via flow cytometry and in vitro stimulation. We found that CD137 activation, specifically of effector CD8 T cells, triggers their intimal infiltration into LDF vessels and promotes a persistent innate-like proinflammatory program. Residence of CD137+ effector CD8 T cells further promoted infiltration of endogenous CD8 T cells with IFNγ-producing potential, whereas CD137-deficient CD8 T cells exhibited impaired vessel infiltration, minimal IFNγ production, and reduced infiltration of endogenous CD8 T cells. Our studies thus provide novel insight into how CD137 costimulation of effector T cells, independent of plaque-antigen recognition, instigates their retention and promotes innate-like responses from immune infiltrates within atherogenic foci. NEW & NOTEWORTHY Our studies identify CD137 costimulation as a stimulus for effector CD8 T-cell infiltration and persistence within atherogenic foci, regardless of atherosclerotic-antigen recognition. These costimulated effector cells, which are generated in pathological states such as viral infection and autoimmunity, have innate-like proinflammatory programs in circulation and within the atherosclerotic microenvironment, providing mechanistic context for clinical correlations of cardiovascular morbidity with increased CD8 T-cell infiltration and markers of activation in the absence of established antigen specificity.


Subject(s)
Aorta, Abdominal/metabolism , Atherosclerosis/metabolism , CD8-Positive T-Lymphocytes/metabolism , Carotid Arteries/metabolism , Immunity, Innate , Lymphocyte Activation , Plaque, Atherosclerotic , Tumor Necrosis Factor Receptor Superfamily, Member 9/metabolism , Adoptive Transfer , Animals , Aorta, Abdominal/immunology , Aorta, Abdominal/pathology , Atherosclerosis/immunology , Atherosclerosis/pathology , CD8-Positive T-Lymphocytes/immunology , Carotid Arteries/immunology , Carotid Arteries/pathology , Cells, Cultured , Diet, High-Fat , Disease Models, Animal , Gene Transfer Techniques , Hyperlipidemias/complications , Interferon-gamma/metabolism , Male , Mice, Inbred C57BL , Mice, Knockout , Phenotype , Proprotein Convertase 9/genetics , Proprotein Convertase 9/metabolism , Signal Transduction , Tumor Necrosis Factor Receptor Superfamily, Member 9/deficiency , Tumor Necrosis Factor Receptor Superfamily, Member 9/genetics , Tumor Necrosis Factor Receptor Superfamily, Member 9/immunology
4.
Am J Physiol Heart Circ Physiol ; 316(6): H1354-H1365, 2019 06 01.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-30925075

ABSTRACT

Atherosclerosis is a chronic inflammatory pathology that precipitates substantial morbidity and mortality. Although initiated by physiological patterns of low and disturbed flow that differentially prime endothelial cells at sites of vessel branch points and curvature, the chronic, smoldering inflammation of atherosclerosis is accelerated by comorbidities involving inappropriate activation of the adaptive immune system, such as autoimmunity. The innate contributions to atherosclerosis, especially in the transition of monocyte to lipid-laden macrophage, are well established, but the mechanisms underpinning the infiltration, persistence, and effector dynamics of CD8 T cells in particular are not well understood. Adaptive immunity is centered on a classical cascade of antigen recognition and activation, costimulation, and effector cytokine secretion upon recall of antigen. However, chronic inflammation can generate alternative cues that supplant this behavior pattern and promote the retention and activation of peripherally activated T cells. Furthermore, the atherogenic foci that activated immune cell infiltrate are unique lipid-laden environments that offer a diverse array of stimuli, including those of survival, antigen hyporesponsiveness, and inflammatory cytokine expression. This review will focus on how known cardiovascular comorbidities may be influencing CD8 T-cell activation and how, once infiltrated within atherogenic foci, these T cells face a multitude of cues that skew the classical cascade of T-cell behavior, highlighting alternative modes of activation that may help contextualize associations of autoimmunity, viral infection, and immunotherapy with cardiovascular morbidity.


Subject(s)
Arteries/immunology , Atherosclerosis/immunology , CD8-Positive T-Lymphocytes/immunology , Inflammation/immunology , Lymphocyte Activation , Plaque, Atherosclerotic , Adaptive Immunity , Animals , Arteries/metabolism , Arteries/pathology , Atherosclerosis/metabolism , Atherosclerosis/pathology , CD8-Positive T-Lymphocytes/metabolism , Cellular Microenvironment , Humans , Inflammation/metabolism , Inflammation/pathology , Signal Transduction
5.
Mucosal Immunol ; 11(5): 1398-1407, 2018 09.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-29907868

ABSTRACT

Immune-mediated lung is considered the result of an exacerbated innate injury immune response, although a role for adaptive lymphocytes is emerging. αß T cells specific for S. aureus enterotoxin A orchestrate a Tγδ17 response during lung injury. However, the mechanism driving IL-17 production is unclear. Here, we show a role for IL-2 triggering IL-17 production by lung granular γδ T cells as IL-17 synthesis and neutrophil recruitment was reduced by IL-2 blocking mAbs in vitro and in vivo. Mass cytometry analysis revealed that lung γδ T cells responded directly to IL-2 as evident from STAT5 phosphorylation and RoRγt expression. IL-2 receptor blocking mAbs and JAK inhibition impaired STAT5 phosphorylation and IL-17 release. Moreover, inhalation of S. aureus enterotoxin A induced IL-2 secretion and caspase-1-dependent IL-1ß activation to drive IL-17 production. This T-cell-mediated inflammasome-dependent IL-17 response is maximum when lung Tγδ17 cells were sequentially stimulated first with IL-2 then IL-1ß. Interestingly, when IL-2 is given therapeutically to cancer patients it carries a known risk of lung injury that is largely indistinguishable from that seen in sepsis. Hence, this novel mechanism reveals therapeutic targets treating both acute lung injury and high-dose IL-2 toxicity in cancer.


Subject(s)
Interleukin-17/immunology , Interleukin-1beta/immunology , Interleukin-2/immunology , Lung/immunology , T-Lymphocytes/immunology , Animals , Antibodies, Monoclonal/immunology , Caspase 1/immunology , Janus Kinases/immunology , Lung/microbiology , Mice , Mice, Inbred C57BL , Neutrophils/immunology , Nuclear Receptor Subfamily 1, Group F, Member 3/immunology , Phosphorylation/immunology , STAT5 Transcription Factor/immunology , Saccharomyces cerevisiae/immunology
6.
Transl Res ; 191: 29-44, 2018 01.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-29154757

ABSTRACT

Chronic overnutrition and obesity induces low-grade inflammation throughout the body. Termed "meta-inflammation," this chronic state of inflammation is mediated by macrophages located within the colon, liver, muscle, and adipose tissue. A sentinel orchestrator of immune activity and homeostasis, macrophages adopt variable states of activation as a function of time and environmental cues. Meta-inflammation phenotypically skews these polarization states and has been linked to numerous metabolic disorders. The past decade has revealed several key regulators of macrophage polarization, including the signal transducer and activator of transcription family, the peroxisome proliferator-activated receptor gamma, the CCAAT-enhancer-binding proteins (C/EBP) family, and the interferon regulatory factors. Recent studies have also suggested that microRNAs and long noncoding RNA influence macrophage polarization. The pathogenic alteration of macrophage polarization in meta-inflammation is regulated by both extracellular and intracellular cues, resulting in distinct secretome profiles. Meta-inflammation-altered macrophage polarization has been linked to insulin insensitivity, atherosclerosis, inflammatory bowel disease, cancer, and autoimmunity. Thus, further mechanistic exploration into the skewing of macrophage polarization promises to have profound impacts on improving global health.


Subject(s)
Inflammation/pathology , Macrophages/metabolism , Macrophages/pathology , Obesity/complications , Adipose Tissue/cytology , Adipose Tissue/pathology , Animals , Colon/pathology , Humans , Inflammation/etiology , Liver/pathology , MicroRNAs , RNA, Long Noncoding , Signal Transduction
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