Cancer Immunity Flashcards
Elimination phase
Tumor cells removed
- combo of innate and adaptive immunity
Equilibrium phase
Tumor cells persist
- immune system prevents spread of tumor cells
Escape phase
Tumor cells spread into tissue
- development of new variants, immunosuppressive environment around the tumor (when the tumor becomes clinically apparent)
Tumor growth mechanisms
When a tumors arise in a tissue a number of immune cells can recognize and eliminate them –> variant tumor cells arise that are more resistant to being killed –> over time a variety of different tumor variants develop –> one variant may escape the killing mechanism, or recruit regulatory cells to protect it, and so spread unchallenged
Tumor specific antigens
Mutated self antigens expressed in tumor cells, not found in healthy cells
- mutations could alter the function of the gene product
Tumor associated antigens
Self antigens that are over-expressed in tumor cells
- reactivation of embryonic genes not normally expressed in differentiated cell
- overexpression of normal self protein by a tumor cell changes density of self peptide presentation, allowing recognition by T cells
- ex: prostate cancer (prostatic acid phosphatase), melanoma (tyrosinase)
TSA and TAA are expressed ____
By the same cell
- both surface expressed and internal proteins
How is adaptive immunity activated?
Tumor cell necrosis
Tumor cell necrosis
- occurs in an environment of low oxygen and nutrient starvation
- results in release of common intracellular proteins such as heat-shock proteins (Hsp70) and high mobility group proteins (HMGB1)
- recognized by TLR on macrophages and immature DCs
Tumor antigens will be presented by ___
DC expressing costimulatory molecule, B7
How do intracellular proteins cause inflammation?
Function as DAMPS
- HMGB1 binds to TLR4
- Hsp70 binds TLR2 and TLR4
Activation of enzymes in response to severe cell stress
- destabilization of cell membrane and plasma membrane of tumor cell = sterile inflammation, proinflammatory
- tumor cell antigens are released with DAMPS, still not enough to activate DC, must be additional signals that separate tumor cell necrosis and healthy cell apoptosis
Immunogenic cell death
Death of tumor cells by chemotherapy that generates an immune response, or cell death of cells that were not radiated by the therapy
Elimination phase (innate immunity)
NK cells and gamma/delta cells
- recognition of MIC (MHC 1 - like) by innate lymphocytes expressing the activating receptor NKG2D
- MIC expression = cell infection, proinflammatory cytokines, DNA damage
Elimination phase (adaptive immunity - CD4)
CD4+ effector helper T cells
- required for protective antibody responses
- required for activation of naive CTL
- macrophage activation: production of reactive oxygen species at the tumor