Cell death and immunity in cancer: From danger signals to mimicry of pathogen defense responses

被引:328
作者
Garg, Abhishek D. [1 ]
Agostinis, Patrizia [1 ]
机构
[1] Univ Leuven, KU Leuven, Dept Cellular & Mol Med, Cell Death Res & Therapy CDRT Lab, Leuven, Belgium
关键词
eat me"/"find me" signals; autophagy; bacteria; metabolites; microbe-associated molecular patterns; danger signaling; endoplasmic reticulum stress; infection; oncolytic virus; pattern recognition receptors; phagocytosis; Toll-like receptors; apoptosis; necrosis; necroptosis; ferroptosis; ENDOPLASMIC-RETICULUM STRESS; APOPTOTIC CELLS; CALRETICULIN EXPOSURE; TUMOR-CELLS; T-CELLS; MOLECULAR-PATTERN; DENDRITIC CELLS; NECROTIC CELLS; PLASMA-MEMBRANE; ANTICANCER CHEMOTHERAPY;
D O I
10.1111/imr.12574
中图分类号
R392 [医学免疫学]; Q939.91 [免疫学];
学科分类号
100102 ;
摘要
The immunogenicity of cancer cells is an emerging determinant of anti-cancer immunotherapy. Beyond developing immunostimulatory regimens like dendritic cell-based vaccines, immune-checkpoint blockers, and adoptive T-cell transfer, investigators are beginning to focus on the immunobiology of dying cancer cells and its relevance for the success of anticancer immunotherapies. It is currently accepted that cancer cells may die in response to anti-cancer therapies through regulated cell death programs, which may either repress or increase their immunogenic potential. In particular, the induction of immunogenic cancer cell death (ICD), which is hallmarked by the emission of damage-associated molecular patterns (DAMPs); molecules analogous to pathogen-associated molecular patterns (PAMPs) acting as danger signals/alarmins, is of great relevance in cancer therapy. These ICD-associated danger signals favor immunomodulatory responses that lead to tumor-associated antigens (TAAs)-directed T-cell immunity, which paves way for the removal of residual, treatment-resistant cancer cells. It is also emerging that cancer cells succumbing to ICD can orchestrate altered-self mimicry i.e. mimicry of pathogen defense responses, on the levels of nucleic acids and/or chemokines (resulting in type I interferon/IFN responses or pathogen response-like neutrophil activity). In this review, we exhaustively describe the main molecular, immunological, preclinical, and clinical aspects of immunosuppressive cell death or ICD (with respect to apoptosis, necrosis and necroptosis). We also provide an extensive historical background of these fields, with special attention to the self/non-self and danger models, which have shaped the field of cell death immunology.
引用
收藏
页码:126 / 148
页数:23
相关论文
共 246 条
  • [1] Vaccination with Necroptotic Cancer Cells Induces Efficient Anti-tumor Immunity
    Aaes, Tania Love
    Kaczmarek, Agnieszka
    Delvaeye, Tinneke
    De Craene, Bram
    De Koker, Stefaan
    Heyndrickx, Liesbeth
    Delrue, Iris
    Taminau, Joachim
    Wiernicki, Bartosz
    De Groote, Philippe
    Garg, Abhishek D.
    Leybaert, Luc
    Grooten, Johan
    Bertrand, Mathieu J. M.
    Agostinis, Patrizia
    Berx, Geert
    Declercq, Wim
    Vandenabeele, Peter
    Krysko, Dmitri V.
    [J]. CELL REPORTS, 2016, 15 (02): : 274 - 287
  • [2] Dendritic cell-based therapeutic cancer vaccines: past, present and future
    Ahmed, Md Selim
    Bae, Yong-Soo
    [J]. CLINICAL AND EXPERIMENTAL VACCINE RESEARCH, 2014, 3 (02) : 113 - 116
  • [3] F-Actin Is an Evolutionarily Conserved Damage-Associated Molecular Pattern Recognized by DNGR-1, a Receptor for Dead Cells
    Ahrens, Susan
    Zelenay, Santiago
    Sancho, David
    Hanc, Pavel
    Kjaer, Svend
    Feest, Christoph
    Fletcher, Georgina
    Durkin, Charlotte
    Postigo, Antonio
    Skehel, Mark
    Batista, Facundo
    Thompson, Barry
    Way, Michael
    Sousa, Caetano Reis e
    Schulz, Oliver
    [J]. IMMUNITY, 2012, 36 (04) : 635 - 645
  • [4] Alexander HR, 2003, CLIN CANCER RES, V9, P6343
  • [5] Malignant effusions and immunogenic tumour-derived exosomes
    Andre, F
    Schartz, NEC
    Movassagh, M
    Flament, C
    Pautier, P
    Morice, P
    Pomel, C
    Lhomme, C
    Escudier, B
    Le Chevalier, T
    Tursz, T
    Amigorena, S
    Raposo, G
    Angevin, E
    Zitvogel, L
    [J]. LANCET, 2002, 360 (9329) : 295 - 305
  • [6] Dendritic Cells as Pharmacological Tools for Cancer Immunotherapy
    Anguille, Sebastien
    Smits, Evelien L.
    Bryant, Christian
    Van Acker, Heleen H.
    Goossens, Herman
    Lion, Eva
    Fromm, Phillip D.
    Hart, Derek N.
    Van Tendeloo, Viggo F.
    Berneman, Zwi N.
    [J]. PHARMACOLOGICAL REVIEWS, 2015, 67 (04) : 731 - 753
  • [7] Clinical use of dendritic cells for cancer therapy
    Anguille, Sebastien
    Smits, Evelien L.
    Lion, Eva
    van Tendeloo, Viggo F.
    Berneman, Zwi N.
    [J]. LANCET ONCOLOGY, 2014, 15 (07) : E257 - E267
  • [8] [Anonymous], MOL CELL
  • [9] Toll-like receptor 4-dependent contribution of the immune system to anticancer chemotherapy and radiotherapy
    Apetoh, Lionel
    Ghiringhelli, Francois
    Tesniere, Antoine
    Obeid, Michel
    Ortiz, Carla
    Criollo, Alfredo
    Mignot, Gregoire
    Maiuri, M. Chiara
    Ullrich, Evelyn
    Saulnier, Patrick
    Yang, Huan
    Amigorena, Sebastian
    Ryffel, Bernard
    Barrat, Franck J.
    Saftig, Paul
    Levi, Francis
    Lidereau, Rosette
    Nogues, Catherine
    Mira, Jean-Paul
    Chompret, Agnes
    Joulin, Virginie
    Clavel-Chapelon, Francoise
    Bourhis, Jean
    Andre, Fabrice
    Delaloge, Suzette
    Tursz, Thomas
    Kroemer, Guido
    Zitvogel, Laurence
    [J]. NATURE MEDICINE, 2007, 13 (09) : 1050 - 1059
  • [10] The three main stumbling blocks for anticancer T cells
    Baitsch, Lukas
    Fuertes-Marraco, Silvia A.
    Legat, Amandine
    Meyer, Christiane
    Speiser, Daniel E.
    [J]. TRENDS IN IMMUNOLOGY, 2012, 33 (07) : 364 - 372