Special Issue: Immunity and Cancer
Immune-mediated mechanismsinfluencing the efficacy of anticancertherapiesSeth B. Coffelt and Karin E. de Visser
Division of Immunology, Netherlands Cancer Institute, Plesmanlaan 121, 1066 CX, Amsterdam, The Netherlands
Feature Review
Conventional anticancer therapies, such as chemother-apy, radiotherapy, and targeted therapy, are designed tokill cancer cells. However, the efficacy of anticancertherapies is not only determined by their direct effectson cancer cells but also by off-target effects within thehost immune system. Cytotoxic treatment regimenselicit several changes in immune-related parametersincluding the composition, phenotype, and function ofimmune cells. Here we discuss the impact of innate andadaptive immune cells on the success of anticancertherapy. In this context we examine the opportunitiesto exploit host immune responses to boost tumor clear-ing, and highlight the challenges facing the treatment ofadvanced metastatic disease.
Then and now: the link between the immune systemand anticancer therapiesThe relationship between anticancer therapies and theimmune system is as old as the invention of anticancertherapies themselves. After the use of mustard gas in thetrenches of World War I, a seminal observation was madethat some exposed soldiers displayed severe loss of bonemarrow and lymph-node cells [1]. This observation thenspurred the idea that the antiproliferative capacity ofmustard gas may also slow the growth of cancer cells.Experiments carried out in mice transplanted with lym-phoid tumors were convincing enough to treat a lymphomapatient [2], and these events initiated the standardizedtreatment of cancer patients with chemotherapy [3,4].
Fast-forward 100 years. The influence of immune cellson tumor progression and metastasis is well established[5], and an appreciation of the impact of the immunesystem during conventional anticancer therapy treatmentis growing. Recent seminal advances indicate that immunecells can shape the outcome of various anticancer thera-pies. As such, immune cells and their molecular mediatorshave evolved into bona fide targets of therapeutic manipu-lation in cancer patients. The recent breakthrough of
1471-4906/
� 2015 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved. http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.it.2015.02.006
Corresponding authors: Coffelt, S.B. ([email protected]);de Visser, K.E. ([email protected]).Keywords: cancer; inflammation; adaptive immune cells; anticancer therapy; mousemodel.
198 Trends in Immunology, April 2015, Vol. 36, No. 4
immunotherapeutics that inhibit negative immune regu-latory pathways, such as anti-CTLA4 (cytotoxic T lympho-cyte-associated protein 4) and anti-PD1, has initiated anew era in the treatment of cancer [6]. In parallel, immu-nomodulatory strategies aimed at dampening protumorfunctions of immune cells are currently being tested incancer patients [7]. Immune cells also function as reliablebiomarkers because their abundance or activation statusoften predicts how well patients respond to a particulartreatment regimen. We review these novel experimentaland clinical insights, highlighting potential implicationsfor the development of synergistic therapies designed tocombat primary tumors and, more importantly, metastaticdisease.
The pros and cons of experimental mouse modelsResearch questions aimed at understanding the role ofimmune cells during anticancer therapy require modelsthat mirror the complex interactions between the immunesystem and diverse forms of human cancers. Transplant-able cancer cell line models and carcinogen-induced cancermodels are the most frequently used for these purposes.However, studies are gaining ground in genetically engi-neered mouse models (GEMMs; see Glossary) that spon-taneously develop specific cancer types as a consequence ofgermline or somatic mutations in discrete cell types. Thereare key differences between cancer cell line inoculationmodels and GEMMs of cancer (Box 1). In GEMMs, normalcells are transformed in situ resulting in the developmentof spontaneous tumors that faithfully recapitulate eachstage of cancer progression – from tumor initiation toadvanced disease, and in some models also metastasis.These spontaneous tumors develop in their natural micro-environment, and share the genetic heterogeneity andhistopathology of human tumors. In stark contrast, trans-plantable models rely on the inoculation of large numbersof selected, homogenous cancer cells grown in 2D. Thetissue of tumor origin and location of injection are oftendisparate in transplantable models, with subcutaneousinjection being the most common site of implantation.Moreover, these tumor cell line inoculation models donot mimic the multistep progression of de novo tumors,and the speed of tumor outgrowth is very fast. Uponinoculation, a large proportion of the cancer cells die,which can prime antitumor immune responses in an
Glossary
Alkylating agents: a class of chemotherapy drugs that directly damage DNA by
substituting alkyl groups for hydrogen atoms on DNA, causing the formation of
crosslinks within DNA chains and thereby resulting in cell death. Examples of
alkylating agents are cyclophosphamide and melphalan.
Anthracyclines: a class of chemotherapy drugs that are widely used to treat
many different types of cancer. Anthracyclines prevent cell division by
disrupting the structure of the DNA via several mechanisms. Examples of
anthracyclines are doxorubicin and daunorubicin.
BrafV600E;Tyr::CreERT2 or BrafV600E;PtenF/F;Tyr::CreERT2 mouse tumor models:
a conditional GEMM of melanoma driven by an activated form of BRAF and
loss of PTEN under the control of the tyrosinase (Tyr) promoter. Tumors are
induced by topical administration of tamoxifen to the skin, and therefore the
timing of tumor development can be initiated as desired.
C3(1)-Tag mouse tumor model: a GEMM model in which SV40 large T antigen
(Tag) expression under the control of the 50 flanking region of the C3(1)
component of the rat prostate steroid-binding protein drives tumor develop-
ment. In females, mammary ductal epithelium is transformed leading to
invasive mammary tumors that resemble human ductal carcinoma in situ
(DCIS). Male mice develop phenotypic changes in the prostate that progress
into invasive carcinoma.
Genetically engineered mouse models (GEMMs) for cancer: in GEMMs for cancer,
normal cells are transformed in situ as a consequence of germline or somatic
mutations in specific cell types, resulting in the development of spontaneous
tumors that faithfully recapitulate each stage of cancer progression – from tumor
initiation to advanced disease and in some models also metastasis.
K14-HPV16 mouse tumor model: a GEMM for de novo squamous carcinogen-
esis of the skin. These mice transgenically express the early region genes of the
human papilloma-virus type 16 (HPV16) under control of the human keratin
14 promoter/enhancer. Cervical tumors can also be induced in these mice by
administration of low-dose estrogen, hence K14-HPV16/E2.
K14cre;Cdh1F/F;Trp53F/F mouse tumor model: a conditional GEMM for invasive
lobular breast cancer. These mice transgenically express Cre recombinase
under the control of the human keratin 14 promoter. In these mice, the alleles
encoding E-cadherin and p53 are homozygously floxed. As a consequence,
mammary and skin epithelial cells stochastically lose E-cadherin and p53,
which induces the formation of tumors in these tissues.
KitV558/+ mouse tumor model: these mice carry a gain-of-function point
mutation on one allele of the Kit receptor gene predisposing them to
spontaneous gastrointestinal stromal tumor (GIST) development.
Metastatic cascade: cancer dissemination is a multistep process, consisting of
the following steps: local invasion at the primary tumor site, intravasation and
survival into the circulation, extravasation and survival at distant sites,
adaptation to a foreign microenvironment, and outgrowth of a metastasis.
During every step of the metastatic cascade, cancer cells encounter normal
host cells, such as immune cells. Interactions between disseminated cancer
cells and normal host cells largely dictate the success of metastasis formation.
MMTV-Neu mouse tumor model: a GEMM for HER2+ breast cancer in which
wild type rat ERBB2 expression is driven by the mouse mammary tumor virus
(MMTV) promoter, which is only active in the mammary gland. These mice
develop multifocal tumors in all 10 mammary glands, as well as spontaneous
lung metastases in most mice. They are maintained on the FVB/n background.
MMTV-NeuT mouse tumor model: similar to MMTV-Neu mice, this GEMM
represents another model for HER2+ breast cancer. However, a mutated form
of the rat proto-oncogene, ERBB2, is expressed under control of the MMTV
promoter in this case. Multifocal tumors also arise in these mice from all five
pairs of mammary glands and they develop spontaneous lung metastases.
These mice are usually maintained on the BALB/c background.
MMTV-PyMT mouse tumor model: a GEMM for mammary tumorigenesis.
These mice transgenically express the polyomavirus middle T antigen (PyMT)
oncogene under the control of the MMTV promoter. These mice develop
multifocal tumors in all 10 mammary glands, as well as spontaneous lung
metastases.
Patient-derived xenograft (PDX) tumor models: fresh tumor tissue from
patients undergoing surgery is implanted into immunodeficient mice (usually
NOD/SCID/Il2rg, otherwise known as NSG, mice) directly or following
enzymatic digestion. Tumors can be grafted subcutaneously or orthotopically.
PDX tumors are serially passaged in additional mice.
Probasin-Cre4;PtenF/F mouse tumor model: a conditional GEMM for Pten-
deficient prostate cancer, where loss of Pten expression is driven by the
probasin promoter. These mice develop prostatic intraepithelial neoplasia
(PIN) lesions that progress to invasive adenocarcinomas.
Platinum compounds: a class of platinum-containing chemotherapy drugs that
bind to and crosslink DNA, resulting in apoptosis. Examples of platinum
compounds are cisplatin, carboplatin, and oxaliplatin.
RIP1-Tag5 mouse tumor model: a conditional GEMM of pancreatic cancer, in
which the rat insulin gene promoter drives sporadic expression of SV40 large T
antigen (Tag) in a subset of pancreatic b cells. Unlike RIP-Tag2 mice that are
systemically tolerant to SV40 large T antigen, these mice develop an
autoimmune response against the oncogene-expressing beta cells.
Taxanes: a class of chemotherapy drugs that disrupt microtubule function, and
thus inhibit mitosis. Taxanes were first derived from plants of the yew tree.
Examples of taxanes are paclitaxel and docetaxel.
Tumor microenvironment: in addition to cancer cells, many ‘normal’ cells are
recruited to and activated in tumors. The tumor microenvironment is
composed of many different types of immune cells, fibroblasts (referred to
as cancer-associated fibroblasts), endothelial cells and other cells that normally
reside in the organ afflicted by the tumor (e.g., adipocytes in breast cancer),
soluble mediators, and the extracellular matrix (ECM). Throughout cancer
progression there is extensive crosstalk between normal cells, soluble
mediators, and cancer cells. These interactions largely dictate tumor behavior
and therapy response. Each tumor type and each tumor stage is characterized
by a unique tumor microenvironment.
Feature Review Trends in Immunology April 2015, Vol. 36, No. 4
unphysiological manner. Importantly, comparative studieshave shown that immune cell behavior and tumor responseto anticancer therapies differs between transplantablecell lines derived from GEMMs and the original GEMM[8–10]. Similarly, other studies indicate that GEMMs usedin preclinical studies may be better predictors of clinicaltrials than transplantable models [11]. Xenografted humancancer cells established from cell lines or fresh patientmaterial (patient-derived xenograft, PDX) in immunocom-promised mice are other frequently used models. While itmay be argued that PDX models are the best representationof human disease from a cancer genetics or drug responsepoint-of-view, these models exclude the participation of theadaptive immune system in cancer progression and anti-cancer therapy response. Therefore, they cannot predict thefull breadth of drug response in immunocompetent humans.These issues, as well as other advantages and disadvan-tages, various strategies to refine these models, and theirsuitability for preclinical studies, have been extensivelydiscussed elsewhere [12–16].
The influence of the immune system onchemotherapeutic efficacyVarious types of chemotherapy drugs exist which killcancer cells via different mechanisms (Figure 1). Cytotoxicdrugs can eliminate cancer cells by inhibition of DNAreplication, chemical damaging of DNA, inhibition of thefunction of crucial enzymes required for DNA synthesis, orprevention of mitosis. Drug-induced cancer cell death, aswell as off-target effects of chemotherapy, elicits severalsystemic and intratumoral changes in the host immunesystem. In turn, the efficacy of chemotherapeutic drugs isinfluenced by the interplay between tumor and immunecomponents. These mechanisms are outlined below forboth innate and adaptive immune cells.
Innate immune cells
The microenvironment of solid tumors consists of multiplecell types, including many immune cell populations thatparticipate in and regulate tumorigenesis and metastasis[17,18] (Box 2). Tumor-associated macrophages (TAMs)represent one of the most extensively studied innate im-mune cell populations in chemotherapy response. Re-search spanning over the past three decades has shownthat TAMs interfere with or augment the therapeuticactivity of several types of chemotherapy, and their rolein these processes has been reviewed recently [19,20]. Oneof the first studies addressing the impact of macrophageson chemo-responsiveness showed that doxorubicin
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Box 1. Comparison of mouse models used in anticancer therapy research
In immune-related anticancer therapy research, three types of mouse
models are commonly used, including cancer cell line-based
transplantable, carcinogen-induced and genetically engineered
mouse models (GEMMs) of cancer. Several advantages and dis-
advantages are presented for each model (Table I). Transplantable
models rely on the injection of in vitro cultured cancer cells into
recipient immunocompetent or immunodeficient mice, and this is
usually done subcutaneously. In carcinogen-induced models, chemi-
cal carcinogens are injected into or topically applied to mice to induce
tumors, where the type and location of carcinogen dictates the
location of the tumors formed. For example, topical application of
DMBA/TPA results in skin carcinogenesis, and injection of methyl-
cholanthrene (MCA) intramuscularly results in fibrosarcomas. One
caveat of this model is that tumors do not always form in carcinogen-
injected mice. By their nature, carcinogen-induced tumors represent
only a small fraction of human cancers. GEMMs are driven by specific
mutations in oncogenes or tumor suppressors. The first generation
GEMMs were developed in the 1980s and depended on germline
introduction of oncogenes whose constitutive expression could be
spatially controlled by tissue-specific promoters. Many of the
experimental studies addressing the causal link between immune
system, tumorigenesis and therapy efficacy have used these so-called
‘onco-mice’. An example is the MMTV-PyMT mouse model for breast
cancer, in which the MMTV promoter drives a viral oncogene,
polyomavirus middle T antigen. MMTV-PyMT mice develop multi-
focal tumors in all five pairs of mammary glands, as well as
spontaneous lung metastases [193]. To overcome some of the
drawbacks of the first-generation GEMMs – such as embryonic
lethality or the development of tumors outside the tissue of
interest – methods have been developed to conditionally induce somatic
mutations in a tissue-specific and/or time-dependent manner. An
example of a second-generation GEMM is the K14cre;Cdh1F/F;Trp53F/F
model in which stochastic Cre recombinase-mediated loss of the floxed
genes encoding for E-cadherin and p53 results in the formation
of mammary tumors resembling human invasive lobular breast
cancer [83].
Table I. Comparison of different types of cancer mouse models.
Characteristics Transplantable (cell line)
models
Carcinogen-induced models Genetically
engineered mouse
models (GEMMs)
Time to tumor progression 0–4 weeks 2–12 months 2–24 months
Penetrance High Variable Model-dependent
Incidence of multifocal tumors Low High High
Relevance of genetic alterations to human disease High (culturing artifacts
also present)
Usually high High
Genetic heterogeneity similar to human cancers Low Model-dependent Intermediate
Histopathologic similarity to human cancers,
including appropriate stromal microenvironment
Low Model-dependent High
Tumors formed by transformation of normal cells No Yes Yes
Controlled timing of tumor initiation High Partial Model-dependent
Tumors arise in natural, anatomically correct
microenvironment
No Yes Yes
Pre-malignant phase and progression-dependent
interplay with host immune system
No Yes Yes
Flexibility of model manipulation (either cancer or
stromal cells) in a time/cost-effective manner
High Intermediate Low
Type of inflammation Acute Carcinogen-induced Chronic
Incidence of metastasis Model-dependent Low Model-dependent
Spectrum of visceral metastasis Model-dependent Low Model-dependent
Ease of surgical resection High (depending on location) Location-dependent Typically low
Predictive value of conventional and immune-based
combinatorial therapies
Frequently low Unknown Potentially high
Feature Review Trends in Immunology April 2015, Vol. 36, No. 4
enhances the tumoricidal properties of TAMs in micetransplanted with leukemia or lymphomas, and thatmacrophage-inactivating agents reduce the efficacy ofdoxorubicin. Interestingly, these observations were chemo-therapy-specific because daunorubicin, another anthracy-cline, together with TAM depletion failed to exhibit anysynergism [21].
More recent literature pertaining to TAMs and solidepithelial malignancies indicates a sinister role for thesecells in limiting chemotherapy efficacy. Increased TAMabundance and low CD8+ T cell abundance in humanbreast tumors is associated with poor response to neoad-juvant chemotherapy [22]. Paclitaxel treatment of mam-mary tumor-bearing mice harboring an MMTV (mousemammary tumor virus)-PyMT (polyomavirus middle Tantigen) transgene increases TAM infiltration into tumors.These cells counteract chemotherapy efficacy via several
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mechanisms, including inhibition of antitumor CD8+ T cellresponses via interleukin 10 (IL10)-mediated suppressionof dendritic cells [22,23], as well as secretion of chemopro-tective survival signals such as cathepsins [24]. Interest-ingly, splenic macrophages have also been implicated inconferring systemic resistance to cisplatin in subcutaneouscell line models via secretion of lysophospholipids thatalter the DNA damage response [25].
In this regard, various strategies to deplete TAMs orneutralize their mediators have been used to enhancechemotherapy efficacy in preclinical tumor models. Themost common strategy used to date involves the inhibitionof colony stimulating factor 1 (CSF1)–CSF receptor(CSF1R) signaling because these molecules are requiredfor macrophage differentiation and maturation[26,27]. Paclitaxel treatment in combination with a CSF1Rinhibitor reduces tumor growth in both MMTV-PyMT and
ChemotherapyAn�metabolites • 5-Fluorouracil (5-FU) • Methotrexate • Gemcitabine
Alkyla�ng agents • Cyclophosphamide • Dacarbazine• Melphalan• Trabectedin
Anthracyclines• Doxorubicin • Daunorubicin• Mitoxantrone
Pla�num compounds • Cispla�n• Oxalipla�n
Taxanes• Paclitaxel • Docetaxel
Topoisomerase inhibitors• Irinotecan• Etoposide
Targeted therapies• AZD8055 (mTOR)• Cetuximab (EGFR)• Dabrafenib (BRAF)• Dasa�nib (BCR-ABL, cKIT, SRC)• Ima�nib (BCR-ABL, cKIT)• Lapa�nib (EGFR, ERBB2/HER2)• PLX4720 (BRAF) • Rapamycin (mTOR)• Rituximab (CD20) • Ruxoli�nib (JAK1 and 2)• Temsirolimus (mTOR)• Trastuzumab (ERBB2/HER2)• Vemurafenib (BRAF)
Radiotherapy • Single high dose • Frac�onated
Immunomodulatory agentsInnate immune cells • AMD3100 (CXCR4) • AMG820 (CSF1R) • AZD8309 (CXCR2) • BLZ945 (CSF1R) • Carlumab (CCL2)• GSK1325756 (CXCR2) • IMC-CS4 (CSF1R) • PLX3397 (cKIT, CSF1R, FLT3)• RG7155 (CSF1R) • SB-656933 (CXCR2) • SCH527123 (CXCR2) • S-265610 (CXCR2) • Trabectedin
Adap�ve immune cells • AMD3100 (CXCR4) • AZD8055 (mTOR)• Basiliximab (CD25)• Blinatumomab (CD3, CD19)• BMS-663513 (CD137) • CP-870,893 (CD40) • Dacetuzmumab (CD40)• Daclizumab (CD25)• Denileukin di�itox (CD25)• Lucatumumab (CD40)• Rapamycin (mTOR)• Rituximab (CD20) • Temsirolimus (mTOR)
Cancer cell
Stromal cell
Checkpoint inhibitors• AMP-224 (PD1) • Ipilimumab (CTLA4) • MPDL3280A (PDL1) • Nivolumab (PD1) • Pembrolizumab (PD1)
Vascular-targe�ng agents An�-angiogenic agents• Bevacizumab (VEGFA)• DC101 (mVEGFR2) • Nesvacumab (ANGPT2)• Suni�nib (VEGFRs, PDGFRs, FLT3, CSF1R)• Sorafenib (VEGFRs, RAF, PDGFRs, cKIT)• Trebananib (ANGPT1 and 2)
Vascular damaging agents • Combretasta�n A-4 phosphate
TRENDS in Immunology
Figure 1. Categories of anticancer therapies and their targets. One of the first anticancer therapies, chemotherapy, was designed to target highly proliferating cancer cells,
but over the past few decades the arsenal of anticancer weapons has increased and now also includes stromal cell targets within the tumor microenvironment. Currently,
cancer cells and stromal cells are targeted with chemotherapy, radiotherapy, targeted therapy – specific for oncogenes or hyperactive signaling pathways – vascular-
targeting agents, T cell checkpoint inhibitors, and immunomodulatory agents, among others. Examples are given of each anticancer therapy category based on their
mention in the text, and the list is not inclusive of every anticancer therapy being tested in preclinical or clinical trials. Because tumors are a collection of cancer and stromal
cells, targeted cells responding to any given anticancer therapy through secretion of molecules or death may also affect their cellular neighbors within the tumor
microenvironment indirectly.
Feature Review Trends in Immunology April 2015, Vol. 36, No. 4
C3(1)-Tag mice [22,23] – a conditional GEMM driven bySV40 large-T antigen in mammary epithelial cells [28]. Ofnote, this therapy combination also decreases spontaneouslung metastasis in MMTV-PyMT mice, while neither pac-litaxel nor CSF1R inhibitor alone affects metastasis for-mation [22,23]. Similarly, when paclitaxel is used with aninhibitor blocking TAM-derived cathepsins, the total lungmetastatic burden of MMTV-PyMT mice is lowered [24]. Inorthotopic pancreatic tumor transplants, blockade ofTAMs and monocytes via CSF1R or CCR2 inhibitors syner-gizes with gemcitabine and paclitaxel to slow cancergrowth and reduce peritoneal metastasis [29]. Similarlyto TAMs in MMTV-PyMT mammary tumors [22], TAMsfrom these pancreatic tumor transplants suppress CD8+ Tcell activation to foster chemoresistance [29]. Studies inxenograft tumor models using human breast cancer celllines have also shown that CSF1 neutralization togetherwith a triple chemotherapy modality (cyclophosphamide,methotrexate, and 5-FU) reverses chemoresistance[30]. Another chemotherapeutic drug, trabectedin, induces
apoptosis specifically in monocytes and macrophages, andthis forms a key component of its antitumor activity [31].
Although these studies reveal that macrophages coun-teract the efficacy of various chemotherapeutics, and sug-gest that the synergism between TAM inhibition andchemotherapy may be beneficial for several types of cancer,it will be important for future experiments to focus onresistance mechanisms within the immune system. Thestudies above combining chemotherapy with TAM block-ade show only a transient effect on tumor growth; thesetumors do not regress and they eventually grow out[22,23,29,30]. The inherent flexibility and redundancy ofthe immune system lends itself to potentially deleteriousfeedback mechanisms in which the functions of a depletedpopulation are reinstated by another population. One suchmechanism is known to occur in cervical tumors of K14-HPV/E2 mice, where genetic inhibition of matrix metallo-protease 9 (MMP9)-expressing TAMs results in a compen-satory neutrophil influx that restores MMP9 levels,angiogenesis, and tumor progression [32]. Similarly,
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Box 2. Immune complexity in tumor-bearing hosts
The immune system has long been postulated to protect against
cancer and metastatic spread; however, tumors exploit several
strategies to successfully evade destruction by the immune system.
Cancer cells hijack the immune system for their own benefit,
allowing themselves to escape from immune attack, maintain
limitless proliferation, survive under dire circumstances, and spread
to distant organs. As such, immune cells and their inflammatory
mediators can create a hospitable microenvironment that is
favorable for cancer outgrowth [194].
Immune cells and their mediators are abundantly present in the
microenvironment of (disseminated) cancer cells. The exact nature
of the tumor-induced local and systemic immune alterations is
dictated by the genetic make-up of the tumor (i.e., type of
oncogenes/loss of tumor suppressors, mutational load), tumor type
(tissue of origin and etiology), tumor stage, therapy history, and age
of the patient.
Macrophages and neutrophils make up a significant proportion of
the inflammatory infiltrate in many tumors, and their accumulation
in cancer patients has been associated with poor prognosis
[22,195,196]. Experimental studies have confirmed protumor and
prometastatic functions for these tumor-associated myeloid cells
[197]. Another type of tumor-associated immune cell that has
gained considerable recent attention is the myeloid-derived sup-
pressor cell (MDSC) [51,52]. MDSCs represent a heterogeneous
group of immature CD11b+Gr1+ cells that include precursors of
macrophages, granulocytes, and dendritic cells at different stages of
their differentiation, and they are defined by their functional ability
to suppress T cell proliferation. Tumor-derived mediators promote
aberrant differentiation of myeloid lineage cells, resulting in
accumulation of MDSCs in the circulation and lymphoid organs.
MDSCs are potent immunosuppressive and proangiogenic cells,
and their accumulation in the circulation of solid cancer patients has
been linked with disease progression and metastasis [198–200].
Alongside myeloid cells, adaptive immune cells are frequently
found in tumors. Their role in tumorigenesis is rather paradoxical
[201]. Whereas CD8+ T cells potentially recognize and kill tumor
cells, CD4+ T cells, Tregs, B cells, and gd T cells play a more sinister
role in tumor biology [49,64,65,78,202]. In tumor-bearing hosts,
crosstalk between adaptive and innate immune cells fosters
disease progression. Tumor-associated myeloid cells frequently
suppress CD8+ T cells and induce Tregs while, at the same time,
cells of the adaptive immune system, notably B lymphocytes, CD4+
T cells, and gd T cells, can actually contribute to the expansion and
protumor polarization of myeloid cells in tumor-bearing hosts
[49,64,65,78,202].
Box 3. Immune cell polarization
As normal epithelial cells make the transition to cancer cells, they
induce the aberrant expression of molecules whose concentration is
unphysiological, or molecules that may be entirely new to a
particular tumor-originating location. Immune cells respond to
these mutation-driven cues both locally and systemically, and the
resulting effect is a skewing of their phenotype and behavior. In
addition to cancer cell-derived factors, physiological aspects of the
tumor microenvironment, such as hypoxia and pH, and factors from
other cell types also educate immune cells. This alteration in
immune cell appearance and function is referred to as polarization.
For many years, researchers have used a binary nomenclature that
reflects extreme ends of immune cell polarization. As an example,
macrophages are often referred to as protumorigenic M2 TAMs or
antitumorigenic M1 TAMs. This has led to the misconception that
there are only two types of TAMs. Recent gene expression data from
several independent laboratories have discredited this oversimpli-
fied idea, showing that TAMs comprise several distinct populations
and share properties of both M1 and M2 cells [203–205]. In regards
to therapy, repolarization of immune cells from a protumorigenic to
a more antitumorigenic state is one strategy that may enhance the
efficacy of traditional anticancer therapies.
Feature Review Trends in Immunology April 2015, Vol. 36, No. 4
inhibition of TAMs via CSF1R in mammary tumor-transplanted mice induces a neutrophil-dependent in-crease in lung metastasis without affecting primary tumorgrowth [33]. The resistance mechanisms counteracting thesynergism between chemotherapy (or other anticancertherapies) and TAM blockade remain to be elucidated.
The CSF1 and CSF1R inhibitors utilized in the abovereports function by depleting the entire TAM population[22–24,29,30]. However, another promising strategy thatmay prevent resistance to TAM depletion is to switch thepolarization of TAMs from a protumorigenic phenotype to amore antitumorigenic phenotype (Box 3). This concept wasrecently demonstrated in a GEMM of glioblastoma [34] andan orthotopic pancreatic cancer model [35], where CSF1Rinhibitors reduce expression of immunosuppressive andproangiogenic genes and increase immunostimulatorygenes in TAMs. Overexpression of a molecule called histi-dine-rich glycoprotein (HRG) also repolarizes TAMs[36]. Resident TAMs in transplanted fibrosarcomas over-expressing HRG exhibit a more antitumorigenic, less an-giogenic phenotype than TAMs in control tumors. This
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phenotypic switching renders tumors more sensitive todoxorubicin by modulation of the tumor vasculature[36]. There is also evidence that type I interferons (IFNs)convert TAMs into tumor-antagonizing cells. TAMs engi-neered to express IFNa upregulate expression of dendriticcell markers in mammary tumors of MMTV-PyMT mice.As a consequence, these mice exhibit increased tumor-infiltrating effector CD8+ T cell frequencies, slower tumorgrowth, and reduced incidence of metastasis [37]. As such,the combination of chemotherapy together with drugs thatrepolarize TAMs may be exploited to achieve greater pa-tient responses and prevent resistance mechanisms withinthe immune system. Some chemotherapeutics skew thepolarization of macrophages directly [38], or indirectly viaregulating cancer cell secreted factors [39].
Intravital imaging of experimental tumor models hasprovided additional clues about the behavior of TAMs afterchemotherapy. In these studies, doxorubicin treatmentinduces infiltration of CCR2-expressing monocytes intonecrotic regions of MMTV-PyMT mammary tumors, wherethese cells control vascular permeability and facilitateregrowth of tumors through MMP9 expression [40]. Conse-quently, spontaneous and transplanted tumors grown inCcr2 or Mmp9 knockout mice acquire an increased sensi-tivity to doxorubicin [40]. These studies suggest that TAMscontrol drug delivery through regulating vessel function-ality and leakiness. In support of this notion, deletion ofproangiogenic molecules, such as vascular endothelialgrowth factor A (VEGFA) and placental growth factor(PlGF), in myeloid cells and bone marrow-derived cells,respectively, decreases vascular leakiness [36,41] andincreases the potency of cyclophosphamide on trans-planted tumors [41].
Similarly to TAMs, the role of tumor-associated neutro-phils in response to chemotherapy treatment is context-and tumor type-dependent. In athymic nude mice bearingE1A/Kras/Bcl-xL-transformed murine embryonic fibro-blast (MEF) tumors, the depletion of neutrophils usingthe Gr1 antibody impairs the anticancer effect of cyclo-phosphamide [42]. The Gr1 antibody binds to the granulo-cyte-specific antigen, Ly6G, as well as to the Ly6C antigen
Feature Review Trends in Immunology April 2015, Vol. 36, No. 4
that is expressed by both granulocytes and monocytes. It istherefore possible that Ly6C+ inflammatory monocytesmay also contribute to tumor control in this scenario.Neutrophil depletion via the more-specific anti-Ly6G anti-body also modestly impairs the anticancer effect of doxo-rubicin on various cancer cell lines transplanted intosyngeneic, immunocompetent mice [43].
By contrast, strategies to impede neutrophil recruit-ment into tumors augment the efficacy of chemotherapy.This has mainly been accomplished by inhibiting the CXCmotif chemokine receptor 2 (CXCR2), the receptor forCXCL1, 2, and 5, that is expressed on neutrophils andother granulocytes [44]. Treatment of human breast cancerxenografts with the combination of doxorubicin, cyclophos-phamide, and a CXCR2 inhibitor significantly slows tumorgrowth and metastasis compared to chemotherapy or theCXCR2 inhibitor alone [44]. Similarly, docetaxel syner-gizes with a CXCR2 inhibitor to prevent tumor progressionin a GEMM for Pten-deficient prostate cancer [45]. In theseprostate tumors, infiltrating neutrophils secrete IL1 recep-tor antagonist (ILRA) to counteract cancer cell senescenceand activate proliferation. Clinical support for a role ofneutrophils in chemotherapy response comes from obser-vations in a variety of cancer patients, such as breast andnon-small cell lung cancer patients, where chemotherapy-induced neutropenia is associated with better patientprognosis [46,47]. We and others have established a me-tastasis-promoting role for neutrophils in breast and mel-anoma models [48–50]. Therefore, targeting neutrophils ortheir mediators may synergize with chemotherapeutics tospecifically decrease metastasis.
Myeloid-derived suppressor cells (MDSCs) are a hetero-geneous group of immature and mature myeloid cells thatare predominated by neutrophils with T cell suppressivefunctions [51,52] (Box 2). In subcutaneous and orthotopiccell line transplantation models, gemcitabine, 5-fluoroura-cil (5-FU), and doxorubicin directly induce splenicCD11b+Gr1+ MDSC apoptosis [53–56]. This chemothera-py-induced MDSC death increases the activity of cytotoxicT cells and contributes to tumor control. However, gemci-tabine and 5-FU have also been reported to induce activa-tion of the NLRP3 (NOD-like receptor family, pyrindomain containing 3) inflammasome in MDSCs, whichlimits chemotherapy efficacy [56]. Other chemotherapeu-tics, such as irinotecan, enhance immunosuppression incolorectal cancer patients and in a carcinogen-inducedcolon cancer model via MDSC expansion [57]. These dataindicate that direct killing of MDSCs by chemotherapy canbe an additional off-target benefit of anticancer therapies,but caution should be exercised because these effects arechemotherapy- and tumor type-specific.
In a variety of transplantable and chemically inducedtumors, specific types of chemotherapy, such as oxalipla-tin and anthracyclines, trigger dendritic cell activationthrough the release of high-mobility group protein B1(HMGB1) and ATP by dying cancer cells [58–60]. Thisprocess is termed immunogenic cell death and itincreases the chemotherapy response of particular tumormodels through the induction of antitumor immunity. Formany years it was thought that dendritic cells in thetumor bed are immature and lack the ability to prime
cytotoxic T cells [61]. However, this notion was recentlychallenged. MMTV-PyMT mammary tumors as well asvarious transplantable tumors contain two main popula-tions of dendritic cells: CD11b+CD11c+CD103�BATF3�
and CD11b�CD11c+CD103+BATF3+ cells. The rareCD11b� dendritic cells have a superior ability to stimu-late cytotoxic T cells [23,62], although intravital imaginghas shown that dendritic cells are outcompeted by TAMSfor T cell interaction, lessening the likelihood of a robustantitumor immune response [62,63]. Antitumor immuni-ty can be reinstated by combining paclitaxel with TAMdepletion or neutralization of their tolerizing abilities(i.e., blocking IL10) [23]. While these studies report thatthe CD11b� dendritic cell subset is important for chemo-therapy response in MMTV-PyMT mammary tumors[23,62], the CD11b+ subset plays a greater role in chemo-therapy-induced immunogenic cell death of transplant-able models [43]. These data emphasize the diverseinfluence of dendritic cell subsets in chemotherapeuticefficacy. As such, it will be interesting to learn whetherthe predominant role of one dendritic cell subset is de-pendent on specific parameters, such as the class ofchemotherapy or type of tumor.
Adaptive immune cells
Similarly to innate immune cells, the role of T cells and Bcells in chemotherapy response is paradoxical becausethese cells may promote or prevent chemotherapeuticpotency. The behavior and function of adaptive immunecells is highly dependent on the class of chemotherapy usedand tumor type and stage. Emerging evidence over the pastfew years has challenged traditionally held views about theanticancer contributions of adaptive immune cells. Takeantibody-producing B cells, for instance. B cells facilitatesquamous cell carcinoma progression in K14-HPV16 micethrough antibody-mediated activation of Fc receptors(FcRs) on TAMs and mast cells, stimulating their proan-giogenic abilities [64,65]. B cells also promote squamouscell carcinoma in a carcinogen-induced cancer model[66]. In essence, B cells are viable targets in this tumortype. Indeed, the combination of platinum-based chemo-therapy or paclitaxel together with anti-CD20 antibodiesin orthotopic squamous cell carcinomas results in stasis ofestablished tumors, whereas chemotherapy or B cell de-pletion as single agents are completely ineffective [67]. Thesynergistic effect of chemotherapy and B cell depletion isdependent upon TAMs and CD8+ T cells because depletionof either population desensitizes tumors to the absence of Bcells and chemotherapy [67]. Taken together, these studiesindicate that inhibiting B cells in combination with che-motherapy may be highly effective for some tumor types.
Studies focused on the role of CD4+ T cells provideanother example of the complexity surrounding adaptiveimmune cells in chemotherapy response. One study hasshown that CD4+ T cells limit the ability of 5-FU to delaythe growth of subcutaneous thymoma cells [56]. 5-FU-exposed MDSCs stimulate CD4+ T cells to express IL17via IL1b; however, the mechanism by which IL17-produc-ing CD4+ T cells (otherwise known as Th17 cells) counter-act the anticancer efficacy of 5-FU is unclear. By contrast,IL17 is required for therapeutic efficacy of doxorubicin in a
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subcutaneous sarcoma model, and gd T cells, not CD4+ Tcells, are the source of IL17 in this scenario [68]. In MMTV-Neu mice – a model driven by wild type rat ERBB2 [69] –inhibition of the immunosuppressive enzyme indolamine2,3-dioxygenase (IDO) cooperates with cisplatin, cyclo-phosphamide, doxorubicin, and paclitaxel to retard tumorgrowth [70]. Interestingly, the antiproliferative effects ofIDO inhibition and paclitaxel are dependent on CD4+ Tcells because their depletion reverses the phenotype.MMTV-Neu cell lines injected into nude mice and treatedwith paclitaxel/IDO inhibitor phenocopy the CD4+ T celldepletion experiments in the de novo tumor model[70]. Conversely, CD4+ T cell depletion further delaysMMTV-Neu tumor growth in mice treated with doxorubi-cin and lapatinib – a small-molecule inhibitor of epidermalgrowth factor receptor (EGFR) and ERBB2 [71]. The im-portance of CD4+ cells following paclitaxel or doxorubicin,without the addition of IDO inhibitors or lapatinib,remains to be established in mammary tumor-bearingMMTV-Neu mice because these controls were not includedin either study [70,71]. Nonetheless, manipulation of Th17cells or other CD4+ T cell subsets may be a useful strategyto combat cancer growth and metastasis when used incombination with chemotherapy.
FOXP3 (forkhead box P3)-expressing regulatory T cells(Tregs) are the most notorious subpopulation of CD4+ Tcells, known for their ability to suppress antitumor im-mune responses [72]. As early as the 1980s it was recog-nized that Tregs in tumor-bearing mice are sensitive tocyclophosphamide [73], and more recent studies confirmedthis both in non-tumor- and tumor-bearing rodent models[74,75]. Depletion of Tregs using anti-CD25 antibodiessynergizes with other types of chemotherapy, includingplatinum-containing agents and etoposide, to reduce tu-mor growth in subcutaneous, transplantable models[76,77] as well as in a GEMM of lung adenocarcinoma[78]. The mechanism of synergy is most likely dependenton reactivation or reinfiltration of CD8+ T cells in tumors[77]; however, this remains to be confirmed.
Cytotoxic lymphocytes, including CD8+ T cells and nat-ural killer (NK) cells, have been reported to contribute tothe efficacy of particular chemotherapeutics. For example,depletion of NK cells abolishes the tumor-shrinking abilityof cyclophosphamide in tumor-bearing immunodeficientmice [42] and in an experimental melanoma metastasismodel [79]. CD8+ T cells with antitumor activity areunleashed upon treatment with a non-cytotoxic dose ofpaclitaxel in a spontaneous melanoma GEMM [80]. Simi-larly, CD8+ T cells contribute to cancer cell killing byimmunogenic cell death-inducing chemotherapeutics in avariety of transplantable and carcinogen-induced tumors[59,60,81]. Chemotherapy-driven immunogenic cell deathis not dependent on NK cells [60], but IFN signaling isimportant in this process [82].
Recently, we and others have challenged the currentlyheld dogma that cytotoxic CD8+ T lymphocytes are re-quired for tumor regression following specific chemothera-peutic agents [59,60,81]. For these studies we used twodifferent GEMMs of breast cancer: K14cre;Cdh1F/F;Trp53F/F mice, a model for invasive lobular breast cancerdriven by the stochastic loss of E-cadherin and p53 [83];
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and MMTV-NeuT mice, a model driven by a mutated formof the rat proto-oncogene ERBB2 [84]. We showed that theadaptive immune system is dispensable for response tooxaliplatin, doxorubicin, and cisplatin [85]. In line withthese data, depletion of CD8+ T cells in MMTV-PyMTmammary tumor-bearing mice fails to counteract the effi-cacy of paclitaxel [22,23], indicating that CD8+ T cells arealso dispensable in this experimental setting. In addition,CD8+ T cell depletion in combination with 5-FU treatmentof subcutaneous EL4 thymomas has no impact on tumorgrowth [56]. Taken together, these observations under-score the plasticity within the adaptive immune systemin response to different chemotherapeutic regimens, andsuggest that chemotherapy on its own may not be enoughto elicit antitumor immune responses in spontaneous epi-thelial tumors. Chemotherapy together with additionalanticancer agents, such as targeted therapies and immu-nosuppression inhibitors, may be required to fully reacti-vate cytotoxic T lymphocytes.
Influence of the immune system on radiotherapyApproximately 50–60% of all cancer patients are treatedwith radiotherapy and this regimen is given alone or incombination with chemotherapy and/or surgery[86,87]. Ionizing radiation induces DNA damage in theform of single-strand and double-strand breaks. As a con-sequence, several cellular events can occur, including DNAdamage recognition, cell cycle checkpoint activation, DNArepair, and/or apoptosis pathway induction. Dying cellsthen release stress proteins and other factors that can besensed by various immune cells to clear away cellulardebris, and initiate tumor recovery processes or secondaryanticancer responses. The participation of innate andadaptive immune cells in radiotherapy efficacy is discussedhere.
Innate immune cells
Several studies have reported increased recruitment ofmonocytes and macrophages following irradiation of tu-mor-bearing mice [88–93]; however, the similarity to ra-diotherapy-treated human tumors needs furtherinvestigation. In mice, radiotherapy-induced TAM infiltra-tion is mainly attributed to radiation-induced hypoxia andthe subsequent surge in hypoxia-regulated chemokines,such as CXCL12 [90,93]. Monocytes and macrophagesexpressing TIE2 (tyrosine kinase with immunoglobulin-like and EGF-like domains 2) – the receptor for angiopoie-tins 1 and 2 – are highly receptive to increased hypoxia andCXCL12 levels [90,93,94], and TIE2-expressing mono-cytes/macrophages have a profound ability to counteracthypoxia through the induction of angiogenesis [95]. As onemay predict, neutralizing CXCL12 or blocking its receptor,CXCR4, to prevent TAM accumulation further delays tu-mor progression when combined with radiotherapy inorthotopic syngeneic and xenograft models of glioblastoma[90], as well as in subcutaneous xenografts of lung carci-noma and syngeneic mammary tumors [93].
When TAMs are depleted in various subcutaneoustransplantable and xenograft models by targeting allCD11b+ cells, the inhibitory effects of radiation on tumorgrowth and angiogenesis are augmented [88,89]. This
Feature Review Trends in Immunology April 2015, Vol. 36, No. 4
result may be largely explained by the contribution ofMMP9 by CD11b+ cells that drives tumor regrowththrough vasculogenesis [88,89]. Similar results are ob-served using other strategies to block TAMs, includingCSF1R inhibitors in combination with fractionated irradi-ation in subcutaneous prostate tumors [91] and carrageen-an in transplantable models [92]. In B16 melanomas,however, the anticancer effect of a single local high radio-therapy dose is not affected by the absence of TAMs[96]. Depletion of Ly6G+ neutrophils and Ly6C+ inflamma-tory monocytes using Gr1 antibodies has no synergisticeffect with radiotherapy in subcutaneous human prostatetumors [89]. Conversely, depletion of neutrophilic MDSCspotentiates the efficacy of radiotherapy on subcutaneouscolon cancer cells [97], presumably through the alleviationof T cell suppression. Dendritic cells also play a role inradiosensitivity [58,96,98], but their activation by irradia-tion varies between transplantable models. For example,HMGB1-sensing Toll-like receptor 4-positive (TLR4+) den-dritic cells are required for radiotherapy efficacy in subcu-taneous thymomas [58]. By contrast, inhibition of HMGB1or knockout of downstream TLR4 signaling componentshas no effect on subcutaneous colon cancer cells followingradiotherapy [99]. In this model, radiotherapy response isdependent on type I IFN signaling in dendritic cells andthe adaptor protein STING (stimulator of IFN genes)[98,99]. Whether the discrepancy between the roles ofmyeloid cells in these studies is caused by the differencesin tumor model, or by the differences in radiotherapy doseand schedule, remains to be investigated. What is alsoabsent from this area of anticancer therapy research is howmyeloid cells respond to irradiated metastases in mousemodels.
Adaptive immune cells
Various independent research groups have reported thatradiosensitivity requires CD8+ T cells for tumor controlin transplantable models [58,96,99–101]. By contrast,CD4+ T cells may not be so important for this process[96]. Similar experiments in GEMMs are unavailable,and the importance of CD8+ T cells in radiotherapyresponse therefore remains unanswered in these models.Interestingly, one study showed that paclitaxel togetherwith irradiation actually increases mammary tumorgrowth and pulmonary metastases when compared toirradiation alone [100]. The same study switched to adifferent model system to explain this phenomenon.Experiments using dacarbazine and radiotherapy inB16 melanomas showed that the radiation-inducedpriming and activation of CD8+ T cells is blunted bychemotherapy [100]. Whether the combination of chemo-therapy and radiotherapy is detrimental to T cell prim-ing in cancer patients is unclear at present. Based onthese data, enhancement of CD8+ T cell activity incombination with radiotherapy may provide additionalbenefit to cancer patients. Indeed, mice bearing trans-plantable MMTV-PyMT mammary tumors depleted ofTregs and treated with irradiation survive longer thaneither animals treated with radiotherapy or Treg deple-tion alone [102]. Various immunotherapeutic strategiesto achieve these effects will be discussed below.
Contribution of immune cells to targeted therapyOver the past decade, targeted therapies have emergedfrom the identification of tumor type-specific driver muta-tions and hyperactive signaling pathways. Some examplesinclude BRAF (B-Raf proto-oncogene, serine/threonine ki-nase) inhibitors (vemurafenib) for melanomas, ERRB2inhibitors (trastuzumab) for HER2+ (ERBB2+) breast can-cer, and PARP (poly ADP-ribose polymerase) inhibitors(olaparib) for BRCA (breast cancer, early-onset)-deficientbreast and ovarian tumors (Figure 1). Many of these areperforming exceptionally well in the clinic. Nevertheless,the lack of durable responses is posing a major problem,highlighting the need to find synergistic therapies. Theimportance of stromal cells in mediating resistance totargeted therapies has recently been shown in vitro usingan extensive co-culture system. In this study, fibroblastswere reported to secrete hepatocyte growth factor (HGF)that activates the MET receptor (MET proto-oncogene,receptor tyrosine kinase) in melanoma cells and down-stream mitogen activated protein kinase (MAPK) andAKT (protein kinase B) signaling pathways to bypassthe dependency on BRAF [103]. We highlight the studiespertaining to immune cells and mouse models. A moreextensive discussion has been provided elsewhere [104].
When assessing the influence of innate and adaptiveimmune cells on the efficacy of targeted therapies, it isimportant to take into account the distinctive properties ofthe two types of targeted drugs: monoclonal antibodies andsmall-molecule inhibitors. Unlike small-molecule inhibi-tors, therapeutic antibodies can activate immune cells,such as macrophages, neutrophils, and natural killer cells,via binding to their FcRs, resulting in complement-depen-dent cytotoxicity (CDC) or antibody-dependent cellularcytotoxicity (ADCC) [105]. Thus, the actual working mech-anism of the targeted antibody drugs is in part dependenton their ability to trigger immune cell activation, whereasthis is not the case for small-molecule inhibitors.
Innate immune cells
In mice bearing melanoma cell lines derived from Braf-V600E;Tyr::CreERT2 tumors, the release of tumor necrosisfactor (TNF) by TAMs protects tumors from MEK (mito-gen-activated protein kinase kinase 1; also known asMAP2K1) inhibitor-induced cell death [106]. This resis-tance mechanism can be overcome by combining MEKinhibitors with an inhibitor of nuclear factor kB (NF-kB)signaling to prevent TAM accumulation and TNF secretionin tumors. Interestingly, TNF expression is independent ofthe state of TAM polarization in this model because allcultured macrophages expressed TNF regardless of thestimuli used in vitro to skew their polarization [106]. Bycontrast, TAM polarization may be important for the re-sponse to targeted therapies in other cancer types and caneven result in adverse effects. Imatinib treatment of tu-mor-bearing KitV558/+ mice – which carry a gain-of-functionpoint mutation on one allele of the Kit receptor genepredisposing them to spontaneous gastrointestinal stro-mal tumor (GIST) development [107] – has been shown torepolarize TAMs from their normal antitumorigenic, T cellstimulating phenotype to a more protumorigenic pheno-type [108]. However, the consequence of TAM skewing by
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imatinib, whether this is beneficial or detrimental fortumor progression, remains untested.
Numerous studies have shown that FcR expression onTAMs and neutrophils is required for the response toantibody-based targeted therapies through ADCC. Usingvarious transplantable models in knockout mice that lackone or more FcRs, tumor regression mediated by rituxi-mab, anti-CTLA4, trastuzumab, and other anti-ERBB2antibodies is reversed [109–115]. A lymphoma patientstudy showing that high TAM infiltration correlates withimproved prognosis after a rituximab-containing regimen,but worsened prognosis without rituximab, supports theseobservations [116]. These data suggest that whereas highnumbers of TAMs serve as an indicator of poor diseaseoutcome in untreated, chemo- or radiotherapy-treatedpatients, they may predict good disease outcome inpatients treated with targeted antibody drugs. Of note,however, FcR activation on TAMs and mast cells by en-dogenous antibodies promotes squamous cell carcinomaprogression and protumorigenic myeloid cell polarizationin the K14-HPV16 model [65]. Similarly, the therapeuticantibody targeting EGFR, cetuximab, induces an immu-nosuppressive phenotype in human monocytes culturedwith colon cancer cell lines in vitro [117]. These datasuggest that the importance of FcR expression on myeloidcells in regulating therapeutic antibody response may becontext-, drug-, and model-dependent.
It has been reported that the efficacy of anti-ERBB2antibodies is also dependent on HMGB1 and TLR signaling[110], suggesting that the mechanism of targeted therapy-induced tumor regression may be similar to immunogeniccell death processes. However, the addition of doxorubicin,an immunogenic cell death-inducing chemotherapy, toanti-ERBB2 treatment counteracts the effects of singleagent anti-ERBB2 and fails to augment the rejection ofestablished mammary tumors. Why the combination of twoimmunogenic cell death inducers fails to synergize remainsa mystery. Paclitaxel, by contrast, boosts the effects of anti-ERBB2 treatment and this combination results in tumorrejection in 100% of mice [110]. These data underscore theimportance of optimally matching targeted therapy withchemotherapeutic agents.
There is evidence from preclinical models that targetingthe JAK/STAT pathway counteracts immunosuppressionand controls cancer progression. For example, Pten-defi-cient prostate tumors from Probasin-Cre4;PtenF/F miceexhibit activation of the JAK2 (janus kinase 2)/STAT3(signal transducer and activator of transcription 3) path-way that mediates a MDSC-driven immunosuppressiveenvironment. Genetic deletion of Stat3 in prostate epithe-lial cells or treatment of prostate tumors with a JAK2inhibitor in combination with docetaxel prevents MDSCrecruitment to tumors and slows tumor growth [118]. Inaddition, JAK2/STAT3 inhibition in mice bearing subcuta-neous sarcomas that lack STAT3 activation modulatesMDSC and dendritic cell proportions as well as theiractivity to reinstate antitumor immunity [119]. BecauseJAK/STAT inhibition directly affects immune cell abun-dance and phenotype in some models, it is tempting tospeculate about the implications beyond this study.Targeted therapies that take out two birds with one
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stone – cancer cells and immunosuppressive myeloidcells – could result in more positive outcomes than whentwo distinct anticancer therapies are used simultaneously.
Adaptive immune cells
Elegant proof-of-principle experiments performed in trans-genic mouse models, where targeted therapy is emulatedby switching off an oncogene-driving mutation (i.e., MYC)during tumor development, have shown that T cells medi-ate tumor clearance through the killing of both cancer cellsand endothelial cells [120,121]. These studies establishedthe importance of T cells in mouse models that mimictargeted therapies, and there are other reports demon-strating the importance of adaptive immune cells usingspecific targeted therapies. Treatment of melanomapatients with BRAF inhibitors increases infiltration ofCD4+ and CD8+ T cells into tumors, and this correlateswith reduced tumor size [122]. In experimental melanomametastasis models, NK cells mediate the antitumor effectsof a BRAF inhibitor, while CD4+ and CD8+ T cells aredispensable [123]. By contrast, CD8+ T cells are requiredfor the response of BRAF inhibitors in transplantablemelanoma models [124,125]. CD4+ T cells, but not CD8+
T cells, mediate tumor clearance following BRAF inhibitortreatment of spontaneous melanomas in a GEMM [126](BrafV600E;PtenF/F;Tyr::CreERT2 mice [127]). Interesting-ly, each of these examples using melanoma models appliedthe same BRAF inhibitor, PLX4720, which is a researchanalog of vemurafenib. Why does each study show a de-pendency on a different immune cell population? Oneexplanation may be the location of the tumor in the modelsused, including subcutaneous, skin and lungs, as well asthe timing of targeted therapy in relation to immune celldepletion. Similarly, imatinib efficacy is dependent on NKcells in melanoma metastasis models [128], whereas CD8+
T cells contribute to tumor regression following imatinibtreatment of GIST-bearing mice or dasatinib treatment ofsubcutaneous mastocytoma-bearing mice [129,130].
In terms of immune regulation, mTOR (mammaliantarget of rapamycin) inhibitors are very interesting tar-geted drugs. mTOR is a crucial regulator of immune func-tion because it promotes the differentiation, activation,and function of T cells, B cells, and antigen-presentingcells [131]. It also controls the balance between effector Tcells and Tregs [132]. Based on its strong immunomodula-tory effects, mTOR inhibition has been successfully uti-lized to prevent transplant rejection over the past decades.In the cancer setting, the immunosuppressive effects ofmTOR inhibitors are very complex and mTOR inhibitor-dependent. For example, the mTOR inhibitor AZD8055, incontrast to rapamycin, enhances the anticancer efficacy ofan CD40 agonist by activating TAMs and DCs, and inducesa strong Th1 response in an experimental liver metastasismodel [133]. Similarly, temsirolimus synergizes with de-pletion of CD4+ T cells or Tregs to reactivate CD8+ T cellsand reduce the growth of subcutaneous renal cell carcino-mas [134].
Further investigations should work out whether depen-dency of targeted therapies on adaptive immune cells istumor type- and/or location-specific. If indeed the impor-tance of adaptive immune cells in regulating the response
Feature Review Trends in Immunology April 2015, Vol. 36, No. 4
to targeted therapy is governed by the location of thetumor, these data would suggest that the roles of immunecells are also likely to be different between primary tumorsand metastasis in distant organs.
Immune cell function following vascular-targetingagentsAngoigenesis inhibitors – the most famous being the anti-VEGF antibody, bevacizumab – and vascular damagingagents target blood vessels, and thus limit re-oxygenationand delivery of nutrients (Figure 1). The link betweenangiogenesis and the immune system is well established[135], and perhaps therefore it is not surprising thatimmune cells regulate the response to antiangiogenictherapies.
The proangiogenic functions of TAMs have been knownfor about a decade [95,136,137]. More recent studies haveshown that TAMs are recruited to experimental tumorsfollowing different forms of antiangiogenic therapies [138–140], often because of the hypoxia-induced increase inchemotactic factors [94,138]. Various studies havereported that TAMs counteract the efficacy of antiangio-genic agents. For example, TAM depletion with clodronateliposomes synergizes with sorafinib in human hepatocel-lular carcinoma xenograft models [141] and with the anti-VEGFR2 antibody, DC101, in subcutaneous colon tumors[142] to reduce tumor growth. Synergy also occurs whencombining a CSF1R inhibitor with DC101 in anothertransplantable model [143].
Blockade of the angiopoietin–TIE2 signaling axis isanother potent strategy to prevent tumor angiogenesisand slow tumor growth. In MMTV-PyMT mice, an anti-angiopoietin 2 (ANGPT2) antibody not only decreasesblood vessel density and retards tumor progression, butit also prohibits TIE2-expressing macrophages from asso-ciating with endothelial cells. The TAM–endothelial cellinteraction is required for angiogenesis, because condi-tional deletion of Tie2 in TAMs decreases blood vesseldensity and mirrors anti-ANGPT2 treatment [140]. Inaddition, ANGPT2 inhibitors reduce lung metastasisin spontaneous breast cancer metastasis models[140,144]. The effect of ANGPT2 inhibitors on metastasismost likely occurs during the late stages of the metastaticcascade when monocyte-derived macrophages facilitateangiogenesis [145], because neutralization of ANGPT2decreases CCL2-dependent monocyte recruitment tolungs and ICAM-mediated monocyte adhesion to endothe-lial cells [144]. Furthermore, inhibition of recruitment ofTIE2-expressing macrophages to transplanted tumors viaCXCR4 blockade amplifies the tumor inhibitory effect ofthe vascular-damaging agent, combretastatin, indicatingthat this subset of TAMs counteracts the efficacy of com-bretastatin [138]. Thus, combining inhibitors of bothTAMs and the angiopoietin–TIE2 axis may yield promis-ing tumor-reductive results.
Studies from a few years ago showed that tumor-induced CD11b+Gr1+ cells (Box 2) also mediate intrinsicresistance to anti-VEGF therapies [146]. More recently, asuppressive functionality was demonstrated for thesecells [147], indicating that CD11b+Gr1+ cells in this sub-cutaneous lymphoma model can be categorized as
MDSCs. These CD11b+Gr1+ cells express proangiogenicmolecules, such as PROK2 (prokineticin 2, also known asBV8), that circumvent the dependency of transplantabletumors on VEGF. Targeting MDSCs or PROK2 syner-gizes with anti-VEGF treatment to reduce tumor growth[146,148,149]. Tumor-derived G-CSF is responsible forinitiating this cascade by mobilizing MDSCs and upre-gulating their expression of PROK2. As one may predict,neutralization of G-CSF also synergizes with anti-VEGFtherapy [149]. The cytokine, IL17, is also involved in thiscascade. Similarly to inhibition of MDSCs, PROK2 or G-CSF blockade, or genetic knockout of IL17, sensitizeresistant, transplanted tumors to anti-VEGF therapy[147]. Interestingly, CD4+ T cells appear to be the sourceof IL17 in these tumor models, and IL17 regulates G-CSFexpression in tumor-associated fibroblasts. We have re-cently shown that IL17-producing gd T cells induce sys-temic expression of G-CSF to expand immunosuppressiveneutrophils and facilitate breast cancer metastasis[49]. In this regard, targeting the IL17-producing Tcell�G-CSF�neutrophil axis in combination with anti-angiogenic therapies may benefit patients with metastat-ic disease.
Much less is known about the role of Tregs and T cellsduring antiangiogenic therapy. In renal cell and colorectalcarcinoma patients, sunitinib reduces the number of Tregsand MDSCs [150–152], and bevacizumab does the same incolorectal carcinoma patients [151]. A few experimentalstudies have shown that endogenous T cell infiltration isincreased following antiangiogenic agents [153–155], andone study has shown that the efficacy of DC101 treatmentis dependent on both CD4+ and CD8+ T cells in a trans-plantable mammary tumor model [153]. As such, the needfor more investigations into the role of immunosuppressiveand adaptive immune cells is warranted to help guide thefuture clinical possibility of combining vascular-targetingagents with immunotherapy.
Immunotherapeutic strategies to enhance the responseto anticancer therapiesThe studies highlighted above have established that bothinnate and adaptive immune cells are viable targets fortherapeutic manipulation. Three main immunomodulato-ry approaches are under intense preclinical and clinicalinvestigation: (i) immunotherapy aimed at boosting thepatients’ own immune system to fight cancer, for examplevia T cell checkpoint inhibitors targeting CTLA4 and thePD1–PDL1 axis (Figure 1), or via cancer vaccines; (ii)immunotherapy through adoptive transfer of (geneticallyengineered) autologous T cells; and (iii) therapies aimed atsuppressing protumor inflammatory processes (Figure 1),such as anti-CSF1R [7] and anti-CCL2 [156,157].
The clinical success of immunotherapeutics that blocknegative immune regulatory pathways, including anti-CTLA4 (ipilimumab) and anti-PD1 (pembrolizumab andnivolumab) [158–160], has reinvigorated cancer researchand oncology. The potential of these drugs shows no signsof stopping because the list of tumor types that respond tocheckpoint inhibitors is expanding rapidly [161,162]. How-ever, checkpoint inhibitors do not benefit every patient[158,163,164]. To increase the number of cancer patients
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Table 1. Beneficial and antagonistic roles of immune cells in anticancer therapy response of various cancer mouse modelsa
Immune cell Anticancer therapy Beneficial
role
Antagonistic
role
Cancer mouse model Tumor location Refs
TAMs Doxorubicin U SL2 lymphoma, L1210 Ha leukemia cell lines Subcutaneous [21]
Paclitaxel U MMTV-PyMT mammary tumor Autochthonous,
orthotopic, lung
metastasis
[22–24]
Paclitaxel U C3(1)-Tag mammary tumor Autochthonous [23]
Doxorubicin U MMTV-PyMT mammary tumor Autochthonous [40]
Gemcitabine U PAN02 and Kras-INK pancreatic cell lines Orthotopic,
liver metastasis
[29]
Paclitaxel U Kras-INK pancreatic cell line Orthotopic [29]
Doxorubicin U HRG-overexpressing T241 fibrosarcomas Subcutaneous [36]
Cyclophosphamide U Lewis lung carcinoma (LLC) cells in
LysM-Cre;VegfaF/F mice
Subcutaneous [41]
Cyclophosphamide +
methotrexate + 5-FU
U MCF-7 human breast cancer cells Subcutaneous [30]
Irradiation U MT1A2 mammary cancer cell line Intradermal [88]
Irradiation U FaDu human prostate cancer cell line Intradermal [89]
Irradiation U U251 and U87MG human glioblastoma cell
lines
Orthotopic [90]
Irradiation U 54A human lung and MCa8 mammary
tumors
Subcutaneous [93]
Irradiation U RM-1 prostate tumor cells Subcutaneous [91]
Irradiation U 4T1 mammary cancer cell line Subcutaneous [92]
Irradiation S S B16F10 melanoma cell line Subcutaneous [96]
MEKi U BrafV600E;Tyr::CreERT2 melanoma cell line Subcutaneous [106]
AZD8055 + anti-CD40 U Renca renal carcinoma cell line Liver metastasis [133]
Sorafinib U SMMC7721 and LM3-R human
hepatocellular carcinoma cell lines
Orthotopic [141]
DC101 U CT26 and LLC cell lines Subcutaneous [142,143]
Anti-ANGPT2 U MMTV-PyMT mammary tumor Autochthonous,
lung metastasis
[140]
Combretastatin U MMTV-PyMT mammary tumor Autochthonous [138]
Combretastatin U N202 mammary tumor cell line Subcutaneous [138]
Neutrophils Cyclophosphamide U Transformed murine embryonic fibroblasts Subcutaneous [42]
Doxorubicin U MCA205, AT3, H2N100 cell lines Subcutaneous [43]
Doxorubicin +
cyclophosphamide
U MDA-231-LM2 and CN34-LM1 human
breast cancer cells
Orthotopic [44]
Docetaxel U Probasin-Cre4;PtenF/F prostate tumor Autochthonous [45]
Irradiation S S FaDu human prostate cancer cell line Intradermal [89]
Trastuzumab U BT474 human breast cancer cell line Subcutaneous [114]
MDSCs gemcitabine U TC1, LLC, AE17, AB12, L1C2 cell lines Subcutaneous [53]
Doxorubicin U 4T1 mammary cancer cell line Orthotopic [55]
5-FU U EL4, LLC, B16F10 and 4T1 cell lines Subcutaneous [54,56]
Docetaxel + JAK2i U Probasin-Cre4;PtenF/F prostate tumor Autochthonous [118]
Irradiation U MC38 colon cancer cell line Subcutaneous [97]
Anti-VEGF U EL4 and LLC cell lines Subcutaneous [146–149]
Dendritic cells Irradiation, oxaliplatin,
doxorubicin,
mitoxantrone
U B16F10, CT26, EG7, EL4, F244, MCA205, TS/
A cell lines
Subcutaneous [43,58–60,
96,98,99]
Paclitaxel U MMTV-PyMT mammary tumor Autochthonous,
orthotopic,
lung metastasis
[23]
CD4+ T cells 5-FU, gemcitabine U EL4 lymphoma cell line Subcutaneous [56]
Paclitaxel + IDO inhibitor U MMTV-Neu mammary tumor Autochthonous [70]
Doxorubicin + lapatinib U MMTV-Neu mammary tumor Autochthonous [71]
Irradiation S S B16F10 melanoma cell line Subcutaneous [96]
PLX4720 S S LWT1 melanoma experimental metastasis Lung metastasis [123]
PLX4720 S S SM1WT1 melanoma cell line Subcutaneous [124]
PLX4720 U BrafV600E;PtenF/F;Tyr::CreERT2
melanomas
Autochthonous [126]
Dasatinib U P815 mastocytoma cell line Subcutaneous [129]
Imatinib S S KitV558/+ gastrointestinal stromal tumor Autochthonous [130]
Temsirolimus U Renca renal carcinoma cell line Subcutaneous [134]
DC101 U NT2.5 mammary tumor cell line Orthotopic [153]
Feature Review Trends in Immunology April 2015, Vol. 36, No. 4
208
Table 1 (Continued )
Immune cell Anticancer therapy Beneficial
role
Antagonistic
role
Cancer mouse model Tumor location Refs
Tregs Cisplatin,
cyclophosphamide,
etoposide
U AC29, B16F10, Meth A, PROb, REBb cell
lines
Subcutaneous [73,74,76,77]
Carboplatin U CC10-Tag non-small cell lung cancer Autochthonous [78]
Irradiation U MMTV-PyMT mammary cell line Orthotopic [102]
Temsirolimus U Renca renal carcinoma cell line Subcutaneous [134]
CD8+ T cells 5-FU S S EL4 cell line Subcutaneous [56]
Oxaliplatin, doxorubicin,
irradiation
U AT3, B16F10, CT26, EG7, EL4, EO771,
H2N100, MC38, MCA2, MCA205 cell lines
Subcutaneous [58–60,81,
96,99,100]
Doxorubicin + lapatinib U MMTV-Neu mammary tumor Autochthonous [71]
Paclitaxel U Metallothionein I-Ret melanoma tumor Autochthonous [80]
Oxaliplatin S S K14cre;Cdh1F/F;Trp53F/F mammary tumor Autochthonous [85]
Paclitaxel S S MMTV-PyMT mammary tumor Autochthonous [22,23]
Irradiation U B16, EG7, LLC cell lines Intradermal [101]
Anti-ERBB2/Neu U TUBO mammary tumor cell line Subcutaneous [110]
PLX4720 S S LWT1 melanoma experimental metastasis Lung metastasis [123]
PLX4720 U SM1WT1 and BrafV600E;PtenF/
F;Tyr::CreERT2 melanoma cell lines
Subcutaneous [124,125]
PLX4720 S S BrafV600E;PtenF/F;Tyr::CreERT2 melanomas Autochthonous [126]
Dasatinib U P815 mastocytoma cell line Subcutaneous [129]
Imatinib U KitV558/+ gastrointestinal stromal tumor Autochthonous [130]
AZD8055 + anti-CD40 U Renca renal carcinoma cell line Liver metastasis [133]
Temsirolimus U Renca renal carcinoma cell line Subcutaneous [134]
DC101 U NT2.5 mammary tumor cell line Orthotopic [153]
NK cells Cyclophosphamide U Transformed murine embryonic fibroblasts Subcutaneous [42]
Cyclophosphamide U B16F10 melanoma experimental metastasis Lung metastasis [79]
Doxorubicin S S CT26 cell line Subcutaneous [60]
PLX4720 U LWT1 melanoma experimental metastasis Lung metastasis [123]
PLX4720 S S SM1WT1 melanoma cell line Subcutaneous [124]
Imatinib U B16F10 melanoma experimental metastasis Lung metastasis [128]
Imatinib S S KitV558/+ gastrointestinal stromal tumor Autochthonous [130]
AZD8055 + anti-CD40 U Renca renal carcinoma cell line Liver metastasis [133]
gd T cells Doxorubicin, irradiation U CT26, EG7, MCA2, MCA205, TS/A cell lines Subcutaneous [68]
B cells Cisplatin, carboplatin,
paclitaxel
U K14-HPV16 squamous skin carcinoma Autochthonous,
orthotopic
[67]
aA checkmark indicates a confirmed role for an immune cell, whereas a dash represents a tested but unimportant role.
Feature Review Trends in Immunology April 2015, Vol. 36, No. 4
that benefit from immunotherapy, it will be crucial to fill inseveral gaps. First, biomarkers that preselect thosepatients most likely to respond to immunotherapy needto be uncovered and implemented into clinical practice.Recent reports suggest that both mutational load as well asthe nature of neo-antigens might dictate whether a tumorwill respond to immune checkpoint inhibitors [165]. Inaddition, high intratumoral CD8+ T cells, PD1+, andPDL1+ cells are associated with increased responsivenessto therapies targeting PD1–PDL1 signaling [160–162,166]. Because many human cancers are characterizedby the influx of T cell suppressive immune cells, such asTregs, TAMs, MDSCs, and neutrophils, it is likely that thequantity and/or phenotype of these cells also contain pre-dictive value. Second, the most efficacious combinations ofconventional anticancer therapies and immunotherapyneed to be established. Given the predictive power ofCD8+ T cell infiltration in tumors, anticancer therapiesthat augment CD8+ T cell infiltration and inhibit immu-nosuppressive cells into tumors are obvious candidates totest with immune checkpoint inhibitors. In support of thisnotion, gemcitabine – a chemotherapeutic that targetsTregs and MDSCs [53,167,168] – and melphalan synergize
with anti-CTLA4 in transplantable tumor models[169,170]. Experimental and clinical studies have alsorevealed synergy between cyclophosphamide – knownfor its Treg-reducing effects [73–75] – and various immu-notherapeutic approaches [171,172]. By contrast, the syn-ergy between cisplatin, a chemotherapeutic that does notaffect immunosuppressive cells, and anti-CTLA4 is contro-versial [170,173]. Radiotherapy also synergizes withCTLA4, PDL1, and combined CD40/CD137 targeting tocontrol the growth of various transplantable models andlung metastases [97,174,175] – a process that is dependenton CD4+ T cells, CD8+ T cells, NK cells, or all of the above[97,174]. These data suggest that intervention strategiesthat induce a favorable T cell influx and/or reduced FOXP3/CD8 ratio in tumors are efficacious partners for checkpointinhibitors.
Chemo-, radio-, targeted, and antiangiogenic therapieshave all been shown to increase recruitment of adoptivelytransferred T cells to transplanted tumors and enhanceantitumor responses [96,176–183], but the mechanism bywhich this occurs has not been fully elucidated. One recentreport showed that irradiation of spontaneous pancreatictumors in RIP1–Tag5 mice increases recruitment of
209
Feature Review Trends in Immunology April 2015, Vol. 36, No. 4
adoptively transferred CD8+ T cells and T cell-mediatedtumor rejection, which depends on repolarization of TAMstowards an antitumorigenic phenotype [184]. Thus, strat-egies that condition the microenvironment to become morereceptive to T cells with antitumor activity may enhancetumor eradication. Intriguingly, the tumor microenviron-ment not only regulates the initial therapeutic effect ofadoptively transferred T cells, by influencing their intra-tumoral recruitment, but can also induce resistance oftumors to adoptively transferred T cells. In a GEMM ofmelanoma, cancer cells acquire resistance to T cell adop-tive transfer through inflammation-induced tumor celldedifferentiation, which is characterized by reversible lossof tumor antigen expression [185].
As discussed above, many tumors are characterized byinflux of myeloid cells with immunosuppressive activity,such as macrophages, MDSCs, and neutrophils, which mayimpede successful T cell mediated eradication of cancercells. Relieving the immunosuppressive networks in tu-mor-bearing patients might be an alternative strategy tomaximize success of immunotherapy, and there is experi-mental evidence to support this idea. For instance, block-ade of CXCR2-mediated MDSC trafficking into
Chemotherap• 5-FU • Cyclophosp• Gemcitabin• Irinotecan• Oxalipla�n
anthracycl• Paclitaxel • Trabectedi
Radiotherapy
Pro-tumorigenicTAM
MDSC
Indirect effects
DC CD8+ T cell
Targeted ther• Ima�nib• JAK/STAT • mTOR inhiTumoricidal
TAM
Vascular-targeagents• An�-ANGP• An�-VEGFR• Combretas
phosphate
TAM
TAM
Monocytes
CD8+ T cell
Figure 2. The effects of anticancer therapies on immune cells. Anticancer therapies, suc
have been shown to modulate various immune cell populations in different ways. Thes
importance of immunogenic cell death processes and CD8+ T cell function in response
[59,60,81], whereas response to oxaliplatin and anthracyclines in some genetically en
processes or CD8+ T cell function [85].
210
transplanted rhabdomyosarcomas increases the efficacyof anti-PD1 therapy [186]. In an orthotopic pancreatictumor model, the triple combination of gemcitabine,TAM blockade via CSF1R inhibition, and anti-CTLA4 –or the quadruple combination with anti-PD1 – are veryeffective at inducing tumor regression [35]. Blockade ofCCL2, a monocyte chemoattractant, has been reported toincrease the anticancer efficacy of various cancer vaccineson subcutaneous tumors [187]. A growing number of next-generation immunomodulatory drugs aimed at targetingtumor-associated myeloid cells are being developed andtested in clinical trials [7]. Combining these immunomod-ulatory drugs with the emerging immunotherapeuticapproaches will likely increase the number of cancerpatients that benefit from immunotherapy.
Concluding remarksWhat is clear from the aforementioned experimental andclinical studies is that the immune system is a majorregulator of anticancer therapy response and resistance.At the same time, it is difficult to deduce one over-archingconclusion from these studies because of the overwhelmingcomplexity and the diversity of immune cell responses to
y
hamide e
andines*
n
TAM
TregMDSC
Direct effects
apies
bitors
MDSC
�ng
T2 2 ta�n A-4
TAM
Endothelial cells
Treg
CD8+ T cell
CD4+ T cell
TRENDS in Immunology
h as chemotherapy, radiotherapy, targeted therapy, and vascular-targeting agents,
e include both indirect and direct effects and a few examples are illustrated. *The
to oxaliplatin and anthracyclines is largely based on transplantable tumor models
gineered mouse models (GEMMs) is not dependent on immunogenic cell death
Box 4. Outstanding questions
� What are the determinants in each tissue/tumor type that dictate
the involvement of immune cells to therapy response?
� What is the role of other, more rare populations of immune cells –
such as mast cells, eosinophils, and innate lymphoid cells – in
anticancer therapy response and resistance?
� Which tumor types will be most responsive to immunotherapy
and/or immunomodulatory agents, and what are the underlying
mechanisms?
� How can the optimal therapy combinations be determined for
individual patients?
� What are the mechanisms underlying resistance towards immu-
notherapy and immunomodulatory agents, and how can resis-
tance be anticipated and prevented?
� Should immune-based treatment strategies for metastatic pa-
tients be the same as for non-metastatic patients?
� How can GEMMs be further sophisticated to better model
anticancer therapy response in humans?
Feature Review Trends in Immunology April 2015, Vol. 36, No. 4
specific anticancer therapies. What we can say for sure isthat the involvement of immune cells is largely dictated bytumor type, mutational signature, tumor model, and tumorlocation (e.g., orthotopic vs subcutaneous) (Table 1), andgeneralizing immune cell response to a particular antican-cer therapy across multiple tumor types or locations shouldbe avoided. Proof of this principle was recently provided bydirectly comparing the efficacy of immunotherapy on threeorthotopic tumors versus their subcutaneous counterparts.This study showed that, in addition to microenvironmentaldifferences in immune cell profile and vascularity, ortho-topic tumors are more immunosuppressive in nature andless sensitive to immunotherapy than subcutaneoustumors [188]. We have also learned that conventionalanticancer therapies have both direct and indirect effectson the immune system (Figure 2). Relatively little is knownabout the role of immune cells during other anticancer
CD4+ T cell
CD8+ T cell
CD8+ T cell
CD8+ T cell
TAM
NK cell
Cancercells
IL4 EGF
CSF1
Paclitaxel +an�-CSF1R
IL1β
IL17/G-CSF
γδ T cell Neutrophils
TAM
Gemcitabine +an�-CSF1R
iNOS
Breasttumor
Cancer cells
Pancrea�ctumor
Lung
Liver
An�-ANGPT2
PLX4720 orima�nib
TNF
Melanoma
Radiotherapy +an�-CTLA4
DC IL10
IL12
Neutrophil
Cancer cells Monocyte
TAM
CCL2
TRENDS in Immunology
Figure 3. Immune cell participation in metastasis at the primary tumor site and distant organs: potential therapeutic targets. Metastasis occurs through a cascade of events
in which cancer cells escape from the primary tumor site, travel through the blood or lymph system, seed in distant organs or lymph nodes and grow out. Based on this
cascade, experimental and clinical investigations are attempting to counteract metastasis by two major strategies that include preventing metastasis from occurring or
combating established metastatic lesions. Preclinical evidence indicates that immune cells are important mediators of the metastatic cascade [17,197], providing additional
opportunities to incorporate immunotherapy and/or immunomodulatory agents into conventional treatment regimens. This figure highlights the studies we reference in
the text regarding the role of immune cells in metastasis formation and the specific anticancer therapies used to block or reduce metastasis in mouse models. These studies
show that immune cells promote or prevent metastasis at the primary tumor site or in distant organs. In genetically engineered mouse models (GEMMs) and transplantable
models of breast cancer, paclitaxel in combination with the TAM (tumor-associated macrophage) targeted antibody, anti-CSF1R, as well as radiotherapy and anti-CTLA4,
inhibits the formation of spontaneous metastasis [22,23,175,202]. Neutralization of angiopoietin 2 (ANGPT2) also reduces metastasis in breast cancer models by preventing
TAM association with endothelial cells and angiogenesis [140] as well as CCL2-dependent recruitment of monocytes to metastatic lesions in lung [144,145]. TAMs resident
in pancreatic tumors suppress CD8+ T cell functions, and targeting TAMs via anti-CSF1R together with gemcitabine decreases liver metastasis through reactivation of CD8+
T cells [29]. Experiments carried out in melanoma metastasis models have shown that the BRAF inhibitor, PLX4720, and the cKIT inhibitor, imatinib, are effective against
lung metastases via an NK cell-dependent mechanism [123,128]. In addition, other mechanistic studies have identified several putative targets that may be effective at
combating metastasis, including IL17-producing gd T cells [49] and prometastatic neutrophils [48,49].
211
Feature Review Trends in Immunology April 2015, Vol. 36, No. 4
therapies not mentioned here, such as hormonal therapy.Future experiments and clinical trials will undoubtedlybroaden our knowledge in this arena.
Right now, the excitement and success of immune check-point inhibitors in advanced cancer patients has set thestage for new therapeutic approaches in the treatment ofcancer with a focus on combined targeting of cancer cell-intrinsic and -extrinsic processes. For optimal clinical im-plementation, however, several key questions and issuesneed to be addressed (Box 4). First, conventional therapiesneed to be optimally matched to specific immunotherapyand/or immunomodulatory drugs to achieve maximal bene-fit. The timing of treatments will be crucial in this process.These combinations will require some aspects of personali-zation, taking into account tumor type, mutation status, andintratumoral immune profiles before treatment. Second,researchers should be on the lookout for immune-basedresistance mechanisms limiting the efficacy of traditionalanticancer therapies and immunotherapies. Because im-mune cells are highly versatile and plastic cells that aredesigned to adapt quickly to a variety of unanticipatedsituations, resistance to immunotherapy and immunomod-ulatory agents is inevitable and may be dictated by rewiringof immune processes. Finally, more effort should be focusedon metastasis. Metastatic disease, not primary tumors, isresponsible for the majority of cancer-related mortality, andcontrolling metastatic disease is the most urgent need in theclinic. The discrepancy between the effects of anticancertherapies on experimental tumor growth and the responseto these drugs in metastatic patients enrolled in earlyclinical trials may explain why about 85% of new drugs fail[189]. Mouse models have revealed meaningful disparitiesbetween the response of primary tumors and their visceralmetastases to anticancer therapies [190,191]. In this regard,choosing preclinical models that accurately represent eachstage of the metastatic cascade is also crucial for under-standing the basic biological mechanisms of metastasisformation as it occurs in patients [192] and to specificallytarget metastatic disease (Figure 3). Furthermore, target-ing both cancer cells and immune cells may be the key toprevent metastasis from occurring and to combat estab-lished metastasis.
AcknowledgmentsWe thank members of the laboratory of K.E.dV. for helpful discussions.S.B.C is supported by a Marie Curie Intra-European Fellowship(BMDCMET 275610) and K.E.dV is funded by a European ResearchCouncil Consolidator award (INFLAMET 615300), the Dutch CancerSociety (2011-5004), Worldwide Cancer Research (AICR 11-0677), theNetherlands Organization for Scientific Research NWO VIDI(917.96.307), and the European Union (FP7 MCA-ITN 317445 TIMCC).
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