Examining the mechanism by which active inflammation occurs in parallel with immunosuppression in the TME

cancer
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If cancerous cells started wreaking havoc in your body, like terrorists in a building, your immune system would act like a SWAT team to combat the enemy. But what if the building entrance were blocked by a mysterious conspirator? The terrorists would surely be able to continue their evil deeds inside the building.

Now, researchers at Kyoto University have identified the mechanism by which active inflammation occurs in parallel with immunosuppression—the conspirator that blocks the entrance—in the (TME).

Single-cell RNA sequencing was used to analyze the action mechanism of the inhibitors of prostaglandin E2 receptor in mouse models. Results showed reduced gene expression of regulatory T cell or Treg, a strong immunosuppressive cell, involved in immunosuppression.

"We discovered that EP2/EP4 inhibitors suppressed tumor growth in mouse models by allowing Treg to infiltrate the tumor and activate there," explains lead author Dean Thumkeo of the Department of Drug Discovery Medicine.

To put the results into human perspective, publicly accessible data indicate that some patients with either lung, ovarian, breast, or liver cancers have high EP2/EP4 expression levels.

"What is important is that EP2/EP4 expression was positively correlated with the expression of genes related to Treg recruitment and activation in these cancer patients," adds Thumkeo.

This correlation suggests to the researchers that patients with high EP2/EP4 expression suffer from a TME that highly suppresses the immune system, suggesting that employing EP2/EP4 inhibitors might benefit some patients with these cancers.

Currently, immune checkpoint inhibitors, or ICIs, which target the rather than the cancer cells, appear to be the new go-to cancer treatment. Typically, about a quarter of show a significant response to ICIs. For the remaining portion of patients, EP2/EP4 inhibitors may be a potential alternative.

"For now, the discovery of the anti-immunosuppressants gives us a new way forward in exploring cancer therapeutics beyond ICIs," concludes Thumkeo.

The research was published in Cell Reports.

More information: Dean Thumkeo et al, PGE2-EP2/EP4 signaling elicits immunosuppression by driving the mregDC-Treg axis in inflammatory tumor microenvironment, Cell Reports (2022). DOI: 10.1016/j.celrep.2022.110914

Provided by Kyoto University
Citation: Examining the mechanism by which active inflammation occurs in parallel with immunosuppression in the TME (2022, June 17) retrieved 24 April 2024 from https://medicalxpress.com/news/2022-06-mechanism-inflammation-parallel-immunosuppression-tme.html
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