Tumor Immunity Flashcards

1
Q

List 3 peices of evidence that immune system can recognize tumor “altered self” antigens

A
  1. higher amount of T cell infiltration into tumor tissue correlates with a bettr prognosis
  2. tumor transplants are rejected by an animal already exposed to that tumor (adaptive immune memory mediated by T cells)
  3. Immunodeficient individuals have an incresaed incidence of some tumor types
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2
Q

What is the cancer immunoediting concept? there are 3 stages explain them

A
  1. Elimination
    1. Immune system is attacking the tumor
  2. Equilibrium
    1. the tumor begins to modify
  3. Escape
    1. the tumor evades the immune system and continues to grow
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3
Q

What is the escape phase?

A
  • immune responses frequently fail to prevent tumor growth. the immune system is designed to prevent “self” reactivity, so mechanisms are in place to prevent immune reactivity to cancerous cells.
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4
Q

once we are in the escape phase and the tumor has evaded immune response are we doomed?

A

NO! there is hope. the immune system can be reactivated by external stimuli to kill tumor cells and elimate tumors

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5
Q

What are the cells that are a part of the adaptive immune system

A
  • Helper th1 CD4 T cells- provide stimulatory cytokines (IL-2, IFN-y)
  • Cytotoxic CD8 T cells- killer cells secrete granzyme (serine proteases) and perforin
  • B cells- soluble anti-tumor IgG and IgM adn complement-mediated killing
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6
Q

How do T cells kill tumor cells if tumors are self?

A
  • T cells are SELF-mutated, or SELF-overexpressed, non-self viral peptides
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7
Q

What are the 4 signals that are requierd to produce activated effective anti-tumor CD8 CTLs?

A
  1. Enaggement of TCR with MHC I presented tumor peptide on APC (DC, Macrophages, B cells)
  2. Engagement of co-stimulatory ligands CD80/86 (APC) with activating receptors CD28 (T)
  3. Effector/memeory cytokines (IFNy, IL-2, IL-5, IL-7, IFNab, IL-12)
  4. upregulation of chemokine receptors required for T cell traficking
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8
Q

once a T cell is activated does it require co-stimulation?

A

NO it is already active so its good to go

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9
Q

What cells in the innate immune system are involved in tumor elimination

A
  1. yDeltaT cells- recognize phosphoantigens expressed by tumor cells, are cytolytic and produce IFN-y and TNF-a. Express the gamma delta TCR not the classical alpha beta TCR
  2. NK- produce IFN-y, tumor cytolytic-liberate tumor antigens to DCs induce DC activation and maturation
  3. Dendritic Cells- secretion of Il-12 and type I IFNs and cross presentation of tumor antigen to CD8 T cells Immature DCs are tolerogenic
  4. Macrophages: M1: proinflammatory mediators, M2 protumorigenic
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10
Q

WHat cytokines are considered anti-tumor

A
  • IFNy-activates macrophages, induces MHC class II, produced by activated NK and T cells
  • IFNa and B-influene activation of innate and adpative immunity, viral
  • IL-12L stimulates production of IFNy and TNF from T cells enhances cytotoxicity (self-amplify immune repsonse)
  • TNF- acute phase inflammation
  • NKG2D- stimulatory receptor, the ligand is overexpressed by infected, transformed, senescent and stressed cells
  • TRAIL- death receptor ligand expressed on activated T cells
  • Perforin-cytolic meiator produced by cytotoxic T cells
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11
Q

How do cancer tumors have a barrier to the immune system

A
  1. immune suppressive cell types
  2. intrinsic spressive T cell mechanisms
  3. immune inhibitory facotors in the tumor microenvironment
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12
Q

WHat cells are involved in tumors ability to inhibit the immune system

A
  • Immature/tolerogenic DCs
  • Myeloid suppressor cells
  • M2 macrophages
  • T Regulatory cells
  • Th2 CD4 T cells
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13
Q

What is immunotherapy

A

mechanisms to ramp up T cell activation

antibodies that target tumor antigens resulting in tumor cell death

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14
Q

What are the 8 ways to ramp up the T cells

A
  1. Block the T cell inhibitory (checkpoint) receptors using blocking antibodies
  2. Adoptive transfer of tumor-specific T cells
  3. Gentically manipulate T cells for adoptive cell tranfer (chimeric antigen receptors of CAR T cells)
  4. Allogenic T cells for anti-leukemia effect
  5. Bispecific antibodies (direct T cell to target molecules)
  6. Agonist antibodies to co-stimulatory T cell receptorsL CD40, CD137, ICOS, CD28, OX40
  7. peptide, dendritic cell and DNA vaccines
  8. immune stimulatory agents
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15
Q

what are immune checkpoints and what do we use to block them

A
  • a plethora of inhibitory pathways 9receptors/ligands) hardwired into the immune system (T lymphocytes, NK cells, B cells and others) to maintain self-tolerance and modulate the duration and magnitude of an immune response: cancers can co-opt these pathways to their advantage
  • Monoclonal antibodies are used to interfere with immune suppression (block immune checkpoints)
  • ex: CTLA-4 and PD-1
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16
Q

What are two immune inhibitors

A

CTLA-4 and PD-1

17
Q

What cellular immunotherapy using TILs

A
  • lymphocytes can be cultured from tumors by removing them in surgery.
  • they are anti-tumor infiltrating lymphocytes
  • TILs are expanded in culture and then give back to patients to provide large numbers of highly activated T cells that recognize cancer cells.
  • this bypasses the suppressive mechanisms of the tumor
18
Q

What are Chimeric Antigen Rceptors?

A

CAR T cells

  • A modified T cell that expresses their native antigen receptors and are able to become strongly activated when the antibody portion of the receptor binds to its antigen
  • don’t need co-stimulation
19
Q

Allogenic T cells (Hematopoietic Stem Cell Transplantation) as Cancer Immunotherapy

A

Donor T cells that are transplanted to the host (patient) along with hematopoietic stem cell graft become activates to host alloantigens. While these activated donor T cells can attack host tissues and can cause graft-versus host disease (GVHD), they can also eliminate residual host cancer cells that express alloantigens

20
Q

What is BiTE?

A

Bispecific antibodies- T cell Engagers BiTE

BiTE gross the T cell and the Tumor and brings them together so the T cell can kill it. It is a way to bypass APCs

21
Q

what are agonist antibodies to co-stimulatory receptors

A

agonists to co-stimulatory receptors like CD40 and CD28. Help you get over needing co-stimulation. this isn’t that helpful though when you don’t have a lot of T-cells bc it wont’t make that big of an effect.

22
Q

WHat are dendritic cell vaccine

A

incubate DCs with tumor antigens, or gentically modify DCs to express tumor antigens. then you inject the DCs. this can help bypass the need for endogenous APCs in the body.

23
Q

What are DNA vaccines

A

DNA actiavtes the innate immune system. You encode the DNA so it encodes tumor antigen. you then inject this naked DNA that has tumor antigen into the patient and it is phagocytosed and the infor is presented by an APC and is a stimulant for T cell actiation

24
Q

What are whole cell tumor vaccines

A

remove some tumor cells ans then irradiate them to stop growth. then modify the genes and inject the irradiated tumor cells back in to stimulate the immune system!

25
Q

What are 2 antibodies that target tumor antigens

A

Trastuzumab- anti-HER2

Rituximab-anti-CD20

26
Q

what are 5 mechanisms by which antibodies can target tumor antigens

A
  1. blocking cell survival signals
  2. complement dependent cytotoxicity
  3. antibody dependent cellular cytotoxicity
  4. direct apoptosis
  5. toxin delivery
27
Q

What can cancer antigens consist of?

A
  1. mutated self proteins
  2. mutates tumor suppressor genes ro oncogenes
  3. overexpressed or abberantly expressed self proteins
  4. oncogeneic viral proteins
  5. post-translationally modified self proteins
28
Q

How do T cells need to see tumor antigens?

A

presented in the context of MHC and engagement with co-stimulatory molecules. the best source of this co-stimulation is provided by a professional APC such as a dendritic cell.

29
Q

Beside T cell stimulation what is needed to provide an effective CTL response

A

effector “Th1” cytokines and up-regulation of chemokine receptors is required to produce effective CTL response

30
Q

What are the signifacnt barriers to cancer immunity

A
  1. cancer cells can modulate their antigen expression
  2. produce suppressive factors
  3. express or recruit suppressive (or regulatory) immune cells and myeloid suppressor cells and M2 macrohpages that produce ROS, iNOS, arginase, IL-10, PGE2 and express PD-L1
31
Q

tumors create barriers to cancer immunity. what needs to be donw to acheive effective anti-cancer immunity

A

these barriers must be turned off or bypassed

32
Q

How can we boost T cell activation

A

checkpoint blockade (antibodies that block signaling through PD-1 and CTLA-4, antibodies that activate T cell co-stimulatory receptors)

33
Q

How can we deliver tumor reactive T cells

A

adoptive cell transfer (ACT), allogenic T cells for leukemia, CAR T cells

34
Q

How can we increase presence of tumor antigens

A

vaccines and antibodies that directly target the tumor or killing

35
Q

How do we augment T cell trafficking to the tumor target

A

bi-specific antibodies (BiTES)

36
Q

How can we boost innate immunity to fight cancer

A

Toll-like receptor agonists

37
Q

How do we block immune suppressive factors/cells to fight cancer

A

IDO inhibitors