by Uppsala University
Researchers at Uppsala University have
discovered lymph node-like structures close to the tumour in brain cancer
patients, where immune cells can be activated to attack the tumour. They also
found that immunotherapy enhanced the formation of these structures in a mouse
model. This discovery suggests new opportunities to regulate the anti-tumour
response of the immune system.
Glioma is a deadly brain tumour with a
dismal prognosis. One reason why brain tumours are very hard to treat is that
our immune system, which is designed to detect and destroy foreign cells
including cancer cells, cannot easily reach the tumour site due to the barriers
that surround the brain.
To fight a developing tumour, killer immune
cells such as T lymphocytes must be activated and primed in our lymph nodes,
before travelling to the tumour site to effectively kill the cancer cells.
Because of the barriers around the brain, it is a challenging process for T
lymphocytes to reach the tumour.
In the study now published in the journal
Nature Communications, the researchers describe their discovery of structures
similar to lymph nodes in the brain where T lymphocytes could be activated.
"It was extremely exciting to discover
for the first time the presence of lymph node-like structures in glioma
patients. These structures are known as tertiary lymphoid structures (TLS) and
they are not found in healthy individuals. They have all the components needed
to support lymphocyte activation on-site which means that they could have a
positive effect on the anti-tumour immune response," says Alessandra
Vaccaro, Ph.D. student at the Department of Immunology, Genetics and Pathology
and shared first author of the study.
The researchers also showed that the
formation of TLS in the brain can be induced by a type of immunotherapy in
glioma-bearing mice. Indeed, when they treated the mice with immunostimulatory
antibodies called αCD40, the formation of TLS was enhanced and always occurred
in proximity to tumours.
"Learning that immunotherapies can
modulate the formation of tertiary lymphoid structures in the brain offers
exciting opportunities to find new ways of regulating the anti-tumour immune
response in glioma," says Anna Dimberg who has led the study.
αCD40 is currently being tested to treat brain tumours in a number of
clinical trials. In the study now published, the researchers found that while
αCD40 boosted TLS formation, it also counterproductively inhibited the
tumour-killing ability of the T lymphocytes. The study has therefore provided
important insights into the multifaceted effects of αCD40 therapy.