scholarly journals LncRNA GAS5 enhanced the killing effect of NK cell on liver cancer through regulating miR-544/RUNX3

2019 ◽  
Vol 25 (2) ◽  
pp. 99-109 ◽  
Author(s):  
Peipei Fang ◽  
Luxia Xiang ◽  
Weilai Chen ◽  
Shaoxun Li ◽  
Shanshan Huang ◽  
...  

This study aimed to explore the role of lncRNA GAS5 in the regulation of the killing effect of NK cells on liver cancer. Compared with a control group, lncRNA GAS5, RUNX3, and NCR1 were down-regulated in NK cells of patients with liver cancer, whereas miR-544 expression was up-regulated in NK cells of patients with liver cancer. Activated NK cells had higher IFN-γ level. Knockdown of GAS5 in activated NK cells decreased IFN-γ secretion, NK cell cytotoxicity, the percentage of CD107a+ NK cells, and the apoptosis rate of HepG2 and Huh7 cells. We also proved the interaction of GAS5 and miR-544, and the negative regulation role of GAS5 on miR-544. GAS5 overexpression in activated NK cells increased RUNX3 expression, IFN-γ secretion, the NK cell cytotoxicity, the percentage of CD107a+ NK cells, and the apoptosis rate of HepG2 cells, while miR-544 mimic abolished the promotion effect of GAS5 overexpression. Finally, in vivo experiments indicated an inhibition effect of GAS5 in tumor growth. LncRNA GAS5 overexpression enhances the killing effect of NK cell on liver cancer through regulating miR-544/RUNX3.

2005 ◽  
Vol 83 (11) ◽  
pp. 1045-1053 ◽  
Author(s):  
Zhongjun Dong ◽  
Cai Zhang ◽  
Haiming Wei ◽  
Rui Sun ◽  
Zhigang Tian

Unlike T cells, the role of natural killer (NK) cells is not well documented in the concanavalin (ConA)- induced hepatitis model. This study aimed to investigate the regulatory effect of high levels of interferon-γ (IFN-γ) on NK cells in ConA-induced hepatitis. The cytotoxicities of NK cells from ConA-injected mice or NK cell lines (NK92 and NKL) were detected by the 4-h 51Cr release assay. Depletion of NK cells with AsGM1 antibody was used to assess the NK cell role in ConA-induced hepatitis. Expression of NK cell receptors and cytotoxic molecules was measured by reverse transcription – polymerase chain reaction. Twelve hours after ConA injection, serum IFN-γ was significantly increased in wild mice, but not in severe combined immunodeficiency mice, and hepatic NK cells exerted impaired cytotoxicity against YAC-l cells in wild mice. Eight hours after NK cells were incubated in serum from ConA-treated mice, NK cell cytotoxicity was down-modulated and the effect was abolished by pretreatment with neutralizing serum IFN-γ with specific antibody in vitro. A high concentration of IFN-γ (> 1000 U/mL) inhibited the cytotoxicities of 2 NK cell lines in vitro, accompanied with down-regulation of NKG2D transcripts and up-regulation of NKG2A/B and KIR2DL transcripts. The inhibitive role of IFN-γ was not seen in NKG2D ligand negative cells. These results suggest that NK cell cytotoxicity was inhibited by high levels of IFN-γ in ConA-induced hepatitis, which may relate to the dispensable role of NK cells.Key words: cytotoxicity, hepatoimmunology, interferon-γ, liver injury.


Blood ◽  
2008 ◽  
Vol 112 (11) ◽  
pp. 3200-3200
Author(s):  
Matthias Krusch ◽  
Julia Salih ◽  
Lothar Kanz ◽  
Helmut R Salih

Abstract CML is characterized by the BCR-ABL fusion protein, which mediates the oncogenic signaling. This led to the development of BCR-ABL inhibitors revolutionizing therapy of CML. However, as recently reported for Dasatinib (Schade et al., Blood 111:1366 (2008); Blake et al., Blood 111:4415 (2008)), these agents may impair the activity of immune effector cells like NK cells and T cells. After initiating oncogenic events, development and progression of clinically apparent malignancy is dependent on the evasion of the tumor cells from immunosurveillance. In light of the important role of NK cell reactivity against leukemia we compared the influence of Imatinib, Nilotinib and Dasatinib on the reactivity of both resting and IL-2 activated NK cells against CML cells to identify the compound with the least immuno-compromising side effects. First, the effects of the compounds on NK cell reactivity in concentrations corresponding to plasma peak levels were studied. Dasatinib (200nM) completely abolished NK cell granule mobilization, cytotoxicity and IFN-γ production, while no substantial inhibition was observed with Imatinib (5μM) and Nilotinib (3.6μM) mediated a minor but significant inhibition (p<0.05, Student’s T-test). Presence of the compounds in concentrations corresponding to IC50 levels (Imatinib 600nM, Nilotinib 30nM, Dasatinib 10nM) revealed no influence of Imatinib and Nilotinib, while Dasatinib still significantly reduced NK cell cytotoxicity and IFN-γ production up to 60%. Since Dasatinib, in addition to BCR-ABL, potently inhibits SRC kinases, which are involved in the activation of MAPK pathways and thus crucial for NK cell cytotoxicity, we determined the influence of the compounds on ERK phosphorylation. While no inhibitory effect was observed using Imatinib and Nilotinib, Dasatinib markedly reduced ERK phosphorylation in NK cells. Our data demonstrate that NK cell anti-tumor reactivity is not inhibited by clinically relevant concentrations of Imatinib. While Nilotinib may mediate a minor effect, Dasatinib substantially impairs NK cell reactivity by inhibition of signaling pathways crucial for NK cell effector functions. For a given patient, the choice and dosing of the most suitable BCR-ABL inhibitor may thus require careful consideration of its influence on the immune system, especially in view of the important role of NK cells in the immunesurveillance of residual leukemia.


2021 ◽  
Vol 22 (2) ◽  
pp. 656
Author(s):  
Hantae Jo ◽  
Byungsun Cha ◽  
Haneul Kim ◽  
Sofia Brito ◽  
Byeong Mun Kwak ◽  
...  

Natural killer (NK) cells are lymphocytes that can directly destroy cancer cells. When NK cells are activated, CD56 and CD107a markers are able to recognize cancer cells and release perforin and granzyme B proteins that induce apoptosis in the targeted cells. In this study, we focused on the role of phytoncides in activating NK cells and promoting anticancer effects. We tested the effects of several phytoncide compounds on NK-92mi cells and demonstrated that α-pinene treatment exhibited higher anticancer effects, as observed by the increased levels of perforin, granzyme B, CD56 and CD107a. Furthermore, α-pinene treatment in NK-92mi cells increased NK cell cytotoxicity in two different cell lines, and immunoblot assays revealed that the ERK/AKT pathway is involved in NK cell cytotoxicity in response to phytoncides. Furthermore, CT-26 colon cancer cells were allografted subcutaneously into BALB/c mice, and α-pinene treatment then inhibited allografted tumor growth. Our findings demonstrate that α-pinene activates NK cells and increases NK cell cytotoxicity, suggesting it is a potential compound for cancer immunotherapy.


Blood ◽  
2016 ◽  
Vol 128 (22) ◽  
pp. 1764-1764 ◽  
Author(s):  
Jens Pahl ◽  
Uwe Reusch ◽  
Thorsten Gantke ◽  
Anne Kerber ◽  
Joachim Koch ◽  
...  

Abstract Introduction: AFM13 is an NK-cell engaging CD30/CD16A bispecific tetravalent TandAb antibody currently in phase 2 clinical development in Hodgkin lymphoma (HL) and other CD30+ malignancies. It engages NK-cells through CD16A with high affinity and specificity and confers significantly stronger NK-cell activation compared to other therapeutic antibodies. We have previously shown synergistic efficacy when NK-cell activation by AFM13 is combined with check-point modulation such as anti-PD-1 treatment, which is known to unleash T cell and NK-cell activity. The goal of this study was to identify further candidates for combination treatments and biomarkers that potentially indicate NK-cell responses to AFM13 treatment. Methods: AFM13-mediated NK-cell cytotoxicity and IFN-γ production after 4-hour interaction with HL cell lines was measured by 51Cr release assays and flow cytometry, respectively. Expression of NK-cell receptors, NK-cell proliferation (CFSE dilution) and expansion (absolute cell counts) was analyzed by flow cytometry. Results: The interaction of NK-cells with AFM13-coated tumor cells up-regulated the expression of NK-cell receptors such as CD25, CD69, CD137/4-1BB as well as molecules that may serve as NK-cell check-points when compared with the unrelated NK-cell binding TandAb AFM12 that does not bind to target cells. Importantly, CD16A engagement by AFM13 enhanced the proliferation and expansion potential of NK-cells when subsequently incubated with IL-15 or with particularly low doses of IL-2. NK-cell cytotoxicity and IFN-γ production was substantially increased towards CD30+ tumor cells in the presence of AFM13. Even target cells resistant to naïve and IL-2/IL-15-activated NK-cells were susceptible to AFM13-induced NK-cell cytotoxicity. AFM13 concentrations of as low as 10-2 µg/mL resulted in maximal activity while AFM13 was significantly more potent than native anti-CD30 IgG1 antibody. NK-cell activation by IL-2 or IL-15 had a synergistic effect on AFM13-mediated cytotoxicity. Conclusion: AFM13 specifically enhances the cytotoxic, proliferative and cytokine-producing potential of NK-cells. Our data indicate that the distinctive modulation of NK-cell receptors can be utilized to monitor NK-cell responses during AFM13 therapy and provides candidates for therapeutic combination strategies. Moreover, the combination with low doses of IL-2 or with IL-15 may expand the quantity of tumor-reactive NK-cells after AFM13 treatment and promote NK-cell functionality in the tumor microenvironment in cancer patients. Disclosures Reusch: Affimed: Employment, Patents & Royalties: Patents. Gantke:Affimed GmbH: Employment. Kerber:Affimed: Employment. Koch:Affimed: Employment. Treder:Affimed: Employment. Cerwenka:Affimed: Research Funding.


2009 ◽  
Vol 27 (15_suppl) ◽  
pp. 3032-3032
Author(s):  
D. M. Benson ◽  
F. Romagne ◽  
P. Squiban ◽  
N. Wagtmann ◽  
S. Farag ◽  
...  

3032 Background: MM is increasing in incidence and remains incurable. NK cells have modest killing activity against MM cells in part because of inhibitory signals from HLA class 1 antigens which act via the KIR receptors on NK cells. A novel anti-KIR blocking antibody (1–7F9 named IPH 2101) enhances patient NK cell cytotoxicity against autologous MM tumor cells in vitro and appears safe in an ongoing phase 1 clinical trial. Methods: NK cells from healthy controls or patients were pre-treated with IPH 2101 or IgG4 isotype control and co-cultured with MM cell lines or autologous MM tumor targets. NK cell production of interferon-gamma (IFN-γ) or granzyme B (GrB) were measured by ELISPOT. An open-label, single-agent, phase 1 dose escalation study of IPH 2101 is being conducted in patients with relapsed/refractory MM. KIR binding, pharmacokinetics, pharmacodynamics, effects on NK cell maturation, and biological effects of IPH 2101 are being monitored in all patients. Results: At an effector to target (E:T) ratio of 1:1, IPH 2101 significantly enhances NK cell IFN-γ release against MM targets (mean 33 spots/well ± 12, SEM vs. 11 ± 0.3, p = 0.005). At an E:T ratio of 10:1, IPH 2101 enhances NK cell cytotoxicity, by GrB release, of patient NK cells against autologous MM tumor cells (mean 111 spots/well ± 14, SEM vs 56 ± 10, p = 0.002). By Western blot, IPH 2101 may reduce levels of src, a kinase known to be involved in inhibitory KIR signaling. Dose escalation in the phase 1 study has been completed from 0.0003 mg/kg to 0.075 mg/kg in 14 evaluable patients. At the highest dose tested, KIR occupancy has been detected at a mean 95% ± 1.4 at 2 hours post dose, lasting up to 56% ± 18 during 2 weeks post dose. At this dose level, PK data show good correspondence with previous modeling activity. No deleterious effect on NK cell maturation has been seen. IPH 2101 has been well tolerated to date. Conclusions: IPH 2101 improves autologous NK cell killing of MM tumor cells by blocking inhibitory KIR. In the ongoing clinical trial, the antibody appears safe and well tolerated at the doses tested. This immunotherapeutic approach may hold promise as treatment for MM and further study is warranted. [Table: see text]


Blood ◽  
2006 ◽  
Vol 107 (9) ◽  
pp. 3617-3623 ◽  
Author(s):  
Shino Hanabuchi ◽  
Norihiko Watanabe ◽  
Yi-Hong Wang ◽  
Yui-Hsi Wang ◽  
Tomoki Ito ◽  
...  

Plasmacytoid dendritic cell precursors (pDCs) are professional type I interferon-producing cells, a critical cell type in regulating innate and adaptive immune responses. By microarray gene expression analysis, we found that pDCs activated by virus or CpG-ODN preferentially express the ligand for the glucocorticoid-induced tumor necrosis factor receptor (GITRL), which was confirmed by reverse transcriptase-polymerase chain reaction (RT-PCR) and flow cytometry analysis. Using the same approaches, we found GITR is expressed by activated natural killer (NK) cells and T cells. We show that pDCs activated by CpG-ODN promote NK cell cytotoxicity and interferon (IFN)-γ production through type I IFNs and GITRL. Using a GITRL-transfected cell line, we further demonstrate that GITRL promotes NK cell cytotoxicity and IFN-γ production in synergy with interleukin-2 (IL-2), IFN-α, and NKG2D triggering. We also demonstrated that pDCs localized in close contact to NK cells in T-cell areas of the tonsils, and a subpopulation of the pDCs expressed GITRL. This study reveals a novel function of GITR/GITRL in pDC-mediated coactivation of NK cells.


2021 ◽  
Vol 12 ◽  
Author(s):  
Hannah Wurzer ◽  
Liza Filali ◽  
Céline Hoffmann ◽  
Max Krecke ◽  
Andrea Michela Biolato ◽  
...  

Natural killer (NK) cells are innate effector lymphocytes with strong antitumor effects against hematologic malignancies such as chronic lymphocytic leukemia (CLL). However, NK cells fail to control CLL progression on the long term. For effective lysis of their targets, NK cells use a specific cell-cell interface, known as the immunological synapse (IS), whose assembly and effector function critically rely on dynamic cytoskeletal changes in NK cells. Here we explored the role of CLL cell actin cytoskeleton during NK cell attack. We found that CLL cells can undergo fast actin cytoskeleton remodeling which is characterized by a NK cell contact-induced accumulation of actin filaments at the IS. Such polarization of the actin cytoskeleton was strongly associated with resistance against NK cell-mediated cytotoxicity and reduced amounts of the cell-death inducing molecule granzyme B in target CLL cells. Selective pharmacological targeting of the key actin regulator Cdc42 abrogated the capacity of CLL cells to reorganize their actin cytoskeleton during NK cell attack, increased levels of transferred granzyme B and restored CLL cell susceptibility to NK cell cytotoxicity. This resistance mechanism was confirmed in primary CLL cells from patients. In addition, pharmacological inhibition of actin dynamics in combination with blocking antibodies increased conjugation frequency and improved CLL cell elimination by NK cells. Together our results highlight the critical role of CLL cell actin cytoskeleton in driving resistance against NK cell cytotoxicity and provide new potential therapeutic point of intervention to target CLL immune escape.


2012 ◽  
Vol 30 (15_suppl) ◽  
pp. 8571-8571
Author(s):  
Ines Esteves Domingues Pires Da Silva ◽  
Sonia Jimenez-Baranda ◽  
Anne Gallois ◽  
Vijay Kuchroo ◽  
Iman Osman ◽  
...  

8571 Background: The concept of CD8+ T cell exhaustion in the context of metastatic cancer has been reinforced by the recent success of immunotherapies targeting the exhaustion markers CTLA-4 and PD-1 in advanced melanoma. T-cell immunoglobulin 3 (Tim-3), another exhaustion marker, is also expressed in natural killer (NK) cells, however its role is still unknown. Recent reports have shown that NK cells, innate immune cells that eliminate tumors through cytotoxicity and IFN-g production, are functionally impaired in advanced melanoma patients, although no receptor has been linked with that phenotype so far. In this study, we characterize the role of Tim-3 in NK cells, particularly in the presence of its natural ligand, Galectin-9 (Gal-9), that is known to be expressed/secreted by some tumor cells including melanoma. Methods: We compared 20 advanced melanoma donors NK cells with 40 healthy donors NK cells as it relates to Tim-3 expression (by flow cytometry) and function (cytotoxicity, IFN-γ production and proliferation). NK cells cytotoxicity was measured by lamp-1 expression, and two different target cells were used: i) K562 cells (Gal-9-) and ii) Gmel Gal-9+ and Gmel Gal-9- sorted melanoma cells. Proliferation was quantified by CFSE after 6 days in the presence of rhIL-2. Recombinant rhGal9 effect was tested in cytotoxicity and IFN-γ production. Results: Melanoma patients NK cells express higher levels of Tim-3 compared to healthy donors NK cells (p<0.05). Melanoma patients NK cells have a defect in cytotoxicity, proliferation and IFN-γ production. Tim-3 expression by itself (without engagement of specific ligands) does not negatively affect NK cell functions (p<0.05). However, when rhGal9 is added to the system, a decrease in NK cell cytotoxicity and IFN-γ production (p<0.05) was observed. Finally, the expression of Gal-9 by the target cells induces a defect in NK cell cytotoxicity (Gmel Gal-9+ vs Gmel Gal-9-). Conclusions: These data suggest that advanced melanoma patients NK cells are exhausted, although it still remains unclear if Tim-3 is involved in this phenotype. In addition,the expression/secretion of Galectin-9, immunosuppressive for NK cells, may be a possible mechanism for tumors to evade immune surveillance.


2019 ◽  
Author(s):  
Li-Juan Chen ◽  
Bin Hu ◽  
Zhi-Qiang Han ◽  
Jian Ni ◽  
Yong-Ming Zhou ◽  
...  

Abstract Background: Intriguingly, microRNA-20a (miR-20a) has been recently witnessed to be involved in the pathogenesis of endometriosis (EMS) but the molecular mechanism controlled by miR-20a is to be undefined. The present study is designed to probe into how miR-20a acts to regulate the cytotoxicity of natural killer (NK) cells. Methods: Most of all, consistent with the clinical determination in EMS patients, miR-20a was determined to be down-regulated in NK cells isolated from nude mice. miR-20a could specifically bind to ERG and negatively regulates its expression in NK cells. Additionally, shRNA-mediated silencing of ERG decreased the expression of HLX. HLX up-regulated STAT4 by inducing proteasome degradation and inhibited NK cell cytotoxicity. Results: Of great importance, forced expression of miR-20a consequently induced NK cell cytotoxicity in vitro by increasing perforin expression via enhancement of STAT4 that was caused by impairing the binding of ERG to HLX enhancer. The in vivo experiments further confirmed the promoting role of miR-20a in the cytotoxicity of NK cells isolated from EMS nude mice and subsequent protective role of miR-20a against EMS-induced endometrial injury. Conclusion: The aforementioned data suggest that miR-20a potentiates the cytotoxicity of NK via up-regulating perforin mediated by ERG/HLX/STAT4, highlighting potential novel mechanisms associated with EMS progression.


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