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A quantitative systems approach to identify paracrine mechanisms that locally suppress immune response to Interleukin-12 in the B16 melanoma model. | LitMetric

AI Article Synopsis

  • Interleukin-12 (IL12) can boost anti-tumor immunity but is often less effective due to local factors in the tumor microenvironment that suppress immune responses.
  • Researchers created an experimental setup to study these suppressive mechanisms and identified Wnt-inducible signaling protein-1 (WISP-1) as a key factor limiting T helper cell response to IL12 in a melanoma model.
  • The study highlights how biochemical cues from tumors, particularly those linked to epithelial-to-mesenchymal transition, can influence immune responses and suggests that the evolution of cancer involves both changes to tumor antigens and the secretion of immunosuppressive proteins.

Article Abstract

Interleukin-12 (IL12) enhances anti-tumor immunity when delivered to the tumor microenvironment. However, local immunoregulatory elements dampen the efficacy of IL12. The identity of these local mechanisms used by tumors to suppress immunosurveillance represents a key knowledge gap for improving tumor immunotherapy. From a systems perspective, local suppression of anti-tumor immunity is a closed-loop system - where system response is determined by an unknown combination of external inputs and local cellular cross-talk. Here, we recreated this closed-loop system in vitro and combined quantitative high content assays, in silico model-based inference, and a proteomic workflow to identify the biochemical cues responsible for immunosuppression. Following an induction period, the B16 melanoma cell model, a transplantable model for spontaneous malignant melanoma, inhibited the response of a T helper cell model to IL12. This paracrine effect was not explained by induction of apoptosis or creation of a cytokine sink, despite both mechanisms present within the co-culture assay. Tumor-derived Wnt-inducible signaling protein-1 (WISP-1) was identified to exert paracrine action on immune cells by inhibiting their response to IL12. Moreover, WISP-1 was expressed in vivo following intradermal challenge with B16F10 cells and was inferred to be expressed at the tumor periphery. Collectively, the data suggest that (1) biochemical cues associated with epithelial-to-mesenchymal transition can shape anti-tumor immunity through paracrine action and (2) remnants of the immunoselective pressure associated with evolution in cancer include both sculpting of tumor antigens and expression of proteins that proactively shape anti-tumor immunity.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3428131PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1039/c2ib20053hDOI Listing

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