Erschienen in:
01.02.2010 | Original Article
Hepatocellular Carcinoma Immunopathogenesis: Clinical Evidence for Global T Cell Defects and an Immunomodulatory Role for Soluble CD25 (sCD25)
verfasst von:
Roniel Cabrera, Miguel Ararat, Mengde Cao, Yiling Xu, Clive Wasserfall, Mark A. Atkinson, Chen Liu, David R. Nelson
Erschienen in:
Digestive Diseases and Sciences
|
Ausgabe 2/2010
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Abstract
Background
The mechanisms involved in hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) establishing an immunologically tolerogenic tumor environment remain poorly characterized.
Aims
This study evaluates effector T cell responses and soluble IL-2 receptor alpha chains (sCD25) in relation to HCC stage/survival and characterizes the impact of sCD25 on effectors.
Methods
Effector cell responses with serum from HCC patients and in serum free conditions were assessed by IFN-γ ELISpot, proliferation and ATP production assays at baseline, after depletion of sCD25, and after supplementation with recombinant sCD25. Sera sCD25 were measured by ELISA and any relationship with stage/survival was determined.
Results
Hepatocellular carcinoma patients had marked global impairment in T cell responses at baseline which correlate with tumor burden and poor outcome. The impairment in immune responses is characterized by low IFN-γ production, cell proliferation, and ATP production. Effector responses are impaired by serum from HCC patients in a dose-dependent manner, implicating soluble factors in the observed immunosuppression. Significant elevations in serum levels of sCD25 are found in patients with HCC, which correlate with tumor burden and a worse survival. T cell reactivity is inversely proportional to serum level of sCD25. Impaired T cell responses improve with sCD25 depletion from HCC serum or IL-2 supplementation suggesting impairment in IL-2 signaling. In contrast, adding increasing doses of sCD25 suppresses effector T cells, which partly involves induction of apoptosis.
Conclusions
These findings show that HCC patients have blunted T cell immunity that is partly related to elevated levels of sCD25, supporting a novel immuno-inhibitory role for this soluble receptor.