Servicio de Analisis Clínicos e Inmunología, UGC Laboratorio Clínico, Hospital Universitario Virgen de las Nieves, Granada, Spain.
Instituto de Investigación Biosanitaria ibs (A-08), Granada, Spain.
Immunology. 2019 Dec;158(4):255-266. doi: 10.1111/imm.13114. Epub 2019 Oct 1.
Tumours can escape T-cell responses by losing major histocompatibility complex (MHC)/ human leucocyte antigen (HLA) class I molecules. In the early stages of cancer development, primary tumours are composed of homogeneous HLA class I-positive cancer cells. Subsequently, infiltration of the tumour by T cells generates a vast diversity of tumour clones with different MHC class I expressions. A Darwinian type of T-cell-mediated immune selection results in a tumour composed solely of MHC class I-negative cells. Metastatic colonization is a highly complex phenomenon in which T lymphocytes and natural killer cells play a major role. We have obtained evidence that the MHC class I phenotype of metastatic colonies can be highly diverse and is not necessarily the same as that of the primary tumour. The molecular mechanisms responsible for MHC/HLA class I alterations are an important determinant of the clinical response to cancer immunotherapy. Hence, immunotherapy can successfully up-regulate MHC/HLA class I expression if the alteration is reversible ('soft'), leading to T-cell-mediated tumour regression. In contrast, it cannot recover this expression if the alteration is irreversible ('hard'), when tumour cells escape T-cell-mediated destruction with subsequent cancer progression. This review summarizes clinical and experimental data on the complexity of immune escape mechanisms used by tumour cells to avoid T and natural killer cell responses. We also provide in-depth analysis of the nature of MHC/HLA class I changes during metastatic colonization and contribute evidence of the enormous diversity of MHC/HLA class I phenotypes that can be produced by tumour cells during this process.
肿瘤可以通过失去主要组织相容性复合体(MHC)/人类白细胞抗原(HLA)I 类分子来逃避 T 细胞反应。在癌症发展的早期阶段,原发性肿瘤由同质 HLA I 类阳性癌细胞组成。随后,T 细胞浸润肿瘤会产生具有不同 MHC I 类表达的大量肿瘤克隆的多样性。一种达尔文式的 T 细胞介导的免疫选择导致肿瘤仅由 MHC I 类阴性细胞组成。转移定植是一种高度复杂的现象,其中 T 淋巴细胞和自然杀伤细胞发挥主要作用。我们已经获得证据表明,转移集落的 MHC I 类表型可以高度多样化,并且不一定与原发性肿瘤相同。负责 MHC/HLA I 类改变的分子机制是癌症免疫治疗临床反应的重要决定因素。因此,如果改变是可逆的(“软性”),可以成功地上调 MHC/HLA I 类表达,从而导致 T 细胞介导的肿瘤消退,免疫疗法可以成功地进行。相比之下,如果改变是不可逆的(“硬性”),当肿瘤细胞逃避 T 细胞介导的破坏并随后发生癌症进展时,它就无法恢复这种表达。这篇综述总结了肿瘤细胞用于逃避 T 细胞和自然杀伤细胞反应的免疫逃逸机制的临床和实验数据。我们还深入分析了在转移定植过程中 MHC/HLA I 类变化的性质,并提供了证据证明肿瘤细胞在此过程中可以产生 MHC/HLA I 类表型的巨大多样性。