4.8 Article

Targeting Stress Sensor Kinases in Hepatocellular Carcinoma-Infiltrating Human NK Cells as a Novel Immunotherapeutic Strategy for Liver Cancer

Journal

FRONTIERS IN IMMUNOLOGY
Volume 13, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

FRONTIERS MEDIA SA
DOI: 10.3389/fimmu.2022.875072

Keywords

immunometabolism; NK-cell; immunotherapy; hepatocellular carcinoma; oncoimmunology

Categories

Funding

  1. Italian Association for Cancer Research (AIRC) [IG 15485]
  2. HUNTER-Accelerator Award [22794]

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NK cell exhaustion in hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) is associated with tumor progression and poor clinical outcome. The hostile tumor microenvironment leads to metabolic deregulation and functional defects of infiltrating NK cells. Targeting p38 kinase can restore the metabolic and functional impairments of HCC-infiltrating NK cells. These findings provide a basis for the development of a new immunotherapeutic strategy for HCC.
Natural killer (NK) cells may become functionally exhausted entering hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC), and this has been associated with tumor progression and poor clinical outcome. Hypoxia, low nutrients, immunosuppressive cells, and soluble mediators characterize the intratumor microenvironment responsible for the metabolic deregulation of infiltrating immune cells such as NK cells. HCC-infiltrating NK cells from patients undergoing liver resection for HCC were sorted, and genome-wide transcriptome profiling was performed. We have identified a marked general upregulation of gene expression profile along with metabolic impairment of glycolysis, OXPHOS, and autophagy as well as functional defects of NK cells. Targeting p38 kinase, a stress-responsive mitogen-activated protein kinase, we could positively modify the metabolic profile of NK cells with functional restoration in terms of TNF-alpha production and cytotoxicity. We found a metabolic and functional derangement of HCC-infiltrating NK cells that is part of the immune defects associated with tumor progression and recurrence. NK cell exhaustion due to the hostile tumor microenvironment may be restored with p38 inhibitors with a selective mechanism that is specific for tumor-infiltrating-not affecting liver-infiltrating-NK cells. These results may represent the basis for the development of a new immunotherapeutic strategy to integrate and improve the available treatments for HCC.

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