Altered expression of 15-hydroxyprostaglandin dehydrogenase in tumor-infiltrated CD11b myeloid cells: a mechanism for immune evasion in cancer

E Eruslanov, S Kaliberov, I Daurkin… - The Journal of …, 2009 - journals.aai.org
E Eruslanov, S Kaliberov, I Daurkin, L Kaliberova, D Buchsbaum, J Vieweg, S Kusmartsev
The Journal of Immunology, 2009journals.aai.org
Many cancers are known to produce high amounts of PGE 2, which is involved in both tumor
progression and tumor-induced immune dysfunction. The key enzyme responsible for the
biological inactivation of PGE 2 in tissue is NAD+-dependent 15-hydroxyprostaglandin
dehydrogenase (15-PGDH). It is well established that cancer cells frequently show down-
regulated expression of 15-PGDH, which plays a major role in catabolism of the PGE 2.
Here we demonstrate that tumor-infiltrated CD11b cells are also deficient for the 15-PGDH …
Abstract
Many cancers are known to produce high amounts of PGE 2, which is involved in both tumor progression and tumor-induced immune dysfunction. The key enzyme responsible for the biological inactivation of PGE 2 in tissue is NAD+-dependent 15-hydroxyprostaglandin dehydrogenase (15-PGDH). It is well established that cancer cells frequently show down-regulated expression of 15-PGDH, which plays a major role in catabolism of the PGE 2. Here we demonstrate that tumor-infiltrated CD11b cells are also deficient for the 15-PGDH gene. Targeted adenovirus-mediated delivery of 15-PGDH gene resulted in substantial inhibition of tumor growth in mice with implanted CT-26 colon carcinomas. PGDH-mediated antitumor effect was associated with attenuated tumor-induced immune suppression and substantially reduced secretion of immunosuppressive mediators and cytokines such as PGE 2, IL-10, IL-13, and IL-6 by intratumoral CD11b cells. We show also that introduction of 15-PGDH gene in tumor tissue is sufficient to redirect the differentiation of intratumoral CD11b cells from immunosuppressive M2-oriented F4/80+ tumor-associated macrophages (TAM) into M1-oriented CD11c+ MHC class II-positive myeloid APCs. Notably, the administration of the 15-PGDH gene alone demonstrated a significant therapeutic effect promoting tumor eradication and long-term survival in 70% of mice with preestablished tumors. Surviving mice acquired antitumor T cell-mediated immune response. This study for the first time demonstrates an important role of the 15-PGDH in regulation of local antitumor immune response and highlights the potential to be implemented to enhance the efficacy of cancer therapy and immunotherapy.
journals.aai.org