Expand to shield: IL-15 and in situ lymphocytic proliferation

Archive ouverte

Bindea, Gabriela | Mlecnik, Bernhard | Galon, Jérôme

Edité par CCSD ; Taylor & Francis -

International audience. The tumor microenvironment includes a complex network of cytokines and chemokines that contribute to shaping the intratumoral immune reaction. Understanding the mechanisms leading to immune-hot (Immunoscore-high) altered (excluded and immunosuppressed) and cold tumors are of critical importance for successful anti-cancer therapies. Two essential mechanisms are highlighted. Specific chemokines and adhesion molecules appeared to target and attract immune effector T cells to the tumor microenvironment and to specific regions within the tumor. These mechanisms are dependent upon intratumoral IL-15 expression. Decreased IL15 expression also affected the local proliferation of B and T lymphocytes. A comprehensive analysis revealed a major contribution of IL15 in shaping the tumor immune contexture. Thus, an in situ lymphocytic infiltration is mediated through chemokines and attraction inside or around the tumor microenvironment, and an IL15-mediated in situ lymphocytic proliferation, which expand the local pool of intratumoral cytotoxic CD8 T-cells are key determinants of the immune contexture. Increased IL15 expression and local proliferation of T-cells were associated with decreased risk of tumor recurrence and prolonged survival of cancer patients. These data provide further mechanisms to prioritize research and help in designing better therapeutic interventions.

Suggestions

Du même auteur

The impact of cellular senescence and DNA damage on colorectal tumour progression

Archive ouverte | Angell, Helen | CCSD

International audience

Immune sunrise: from the immunome to the cancer immune landscape

Archive ouverte | Bindea, Gabriela | CCSD

International audience. The complex dynamics of the tumor-immune interaction during tumor progression have been characterized by integrating genomic and proteomic experiments. The Immunome, a reference compendium of...

License to kill: microsatellite instability and immune contexture

Archive ouverte | Maby, Pauline | CCSD

International audience. Colorectal cancers (CRCs) with microsatellite instability (MSI) are due to a defect in the DNA mismatch repair (MMR) system resulting in an accumulation of frame-shift mutations. They are cha...

Chargement des enrichissements...