AI Article Synopsis

  • Two major chaperones, calreticulin (CRT) and binding immunoglobulin protein (GRP78/BiP), have distinct immunoregulatory functions: CRT promotes inflammation and T cell activation, while GRP78/BiP induces anti-inflammatory responses and regulates immune balance.
  • Endogenous CRT on cancer cells signals for their removal by immune cells, but infused CRT can hinder this process; conversely, low levels of BiP can indicate ER stress in tumors.
  • Therapeutics targeting the surface relocation of these chaperones, such as enhancing CRT exposure or infusing GRP78/BiP analogs, are being explored in clinical trials to improve immune responses in diseases like cancer and rheumatoid arthritis.

Article Abstract

Two major chaperones, calreticulin (CRT) and binding immunoglobulin protein (GRP78/BiP) dependent on their location, have immunoregulatory or anti-inflammatory functions respectively. CRT induces pro-inflammatory cytokines, dendritic cell (DC) maturation and activates cytotoxic T cells against tumours. By contrast, GRP78/BiP induces anti-inflammatory cytokines, inhibits DC maturation and heightens T-regulatory cell responses. These latter functions rebalance immune homeostasis in inflammatory diseases, such as rheumatoid arthritis. Both chaperones are therapeutically relevant agents acting primarily on monocytes/DCs. Endogenous exposure of CRT on cancer cell surfaces acts as an 'eat-me' signal and facilitates improved elimination of stressed and dying tumour cells by DCs. Therefore, therapeutics that promote endogenous CRT translocation to the cell surface can improve the removal of cancer cells. However, infused recombinant CRT dampens this cancer cell eradication by binding directly to the DCs. Low levels of endogenous BiP appear as a surface biomarker of endoplasmic reticulum (ER) stress in some types of tumour cells, a reflection of cells undergoing proliferation, in which resulting hypoxia and nutrient deprivation perturb ER homeostasis triggering the unfolded protein response, leading to increased expression of GRP78/BiP and altered cellular location. Conversely, infusion of an analogue of GRP78/BiP (IRL201805) can lead to long-term immune resetting and restoration of immune homeostasis. The therapeutic potential of both chaperones relies on them being relocated from their intracellular ER environment. Ongoing clinical trials are employing therapeutic interventions to either enhance endogenous cell surface CRT or infuse IRL201805, thereby triggering several disease-relevant immune responses leading to a beneficial clinical outcome.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9889696PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/jcmm.17669DOI Listing

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