4.7 Article

Hypoxia-Adenosinergic Immunosuppression: Tumor Protection by T Regulatory Cells and Cancerous Tissue Hypoxia

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CLINICAL CANCER RESEARCH
卷 14, 期 19, 页码 5947-5952

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AMER ASSOC CANCER RESEARCH
DOI: 10.1158/1078-0432.CCR-08-0229

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Cancerous tissue protection from tumor-recognizing CD8(+) and CD4(+) T cells (antitumor T cells) limits the therapeutic potential of immunotherapies. We propose that tumor protection is to a large extent due to (a) inhibition of antitumor T cells by hypoxia-driven accumulation of extracellular adenosine in local tumor microenvironment and due to (b) T regulatory cell-produced extracellular adenosine. The adenosine triggers the immunosuppressive signaling via intracellular cyclic AMP-elevating A2A adenosine receptors (A2AR) on antitumor T cells. In addition, the activated antitumor T cells in hypoxic tumor microenvironment could be inhibited by elevated levels of immunosuppressive hypoxia-inducible factor-1 alpha. Complete rejection or tumor growth retardation was observed when A2AR has been genetically eliminated or antagonized with synthetic drug or with natural A2AR antagonist 1, 3,7-trimethylxanthine (caffeine). The promising strategy may be in combining the anti-hypoxia-adenosinergic treatment that prevents inhibition of antitumor T cells by tumor-produced and T regulatory cell-produced adenosine with targeting of other negative regulators, such as CTL antigen-4 blockade. Observations of tumor rejection in mice and massive prospective epidemiologic studies support the feasibility of anti-hypoxia-adenosinergic combined immunotherapy.

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