@article{MontalbandelBarrioPenskiSchlahsaetal.2016, author = {Montalb{\´a}n del Barrio, Itsaso and Penski, Cornelia and Schlahsa, Laura and Stein, Roland G. and Diessner, Joachim and W{\"o}ckel, Achim and Dietl, Johannes and Lutz, Manfred B. and Mittelbronn, Michel and Wischhusen, J{\"o}rg and H{\"a}usler, Sebastian F. M.}, title = {Adenosine-generating ovarian cancer cells attract myeloid cells which differentiate into adenosine-generating tumor associated macrophages - a self-amplifying, CD39- and CD73-dependent mechanism for tumor immune escape}, series = {Journal for ImmunoTherapy of Cancer}, volume = {4}, journal = {Journal for ImmunoTherapy of Cancer}, number = {49}, doi = {10.1186/s40425-016-0154-9}, url = {http://nbn-resolving.de/urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-146624}, year = {2016}, abstract = {Background Ovarian cancer (OvCA) tissues show abundant expression of the ectonucleotidases CD39 and CD73 which generate immunomodulatory adenosine, thereby inhibiting cytotoxic lymphocytes. Little, however, is known about the effect of adenosine on myeloid cells. Considering that tumor associated macrophages (TAM) and myeloid-derived suppressor cells (MDSC) constitute up to 20 \% of OvCA tissue, we investigated the effect of adenosine on myeloid cells and explored a possible contribution of myeloid cells to adenosine generation in vitro and ex vivo. Methods Monocytes were used as human blood-derived myeloid cells. After co-incubation with SK-OV-3 or OAW-42 OvCA cells, monocyte migration was determined in transwell assays. For conversion into M2-polarized "TAM-like" macrophages, monocytes were co-incubated with OAW-42 cells. Ex vivo TAMs were obtained from OvCA ascites. Macrophage phenotypes were investigated by intracellular staining for IL-10 and IL-12. CD39 and CD73 expression were assessed by FACS analysis both on in vitro-induced TAM-like macrophages and on ascites-derived ex situ-TAMs. Myeloid cells in solid tumor tissue were analyzed by immunohistochemistry. Generation of biologically active adenosine by TAM-like macrophages was measured in luciferase-based reporter assays. Functional effects of adenosine were investigated in proliferation-experiments with CD4+ T cells and specific inhibitors. Results When CD39 or CD73 activity on OvCA cells were blocked, the migration of monocytes towards OvCA cells was significantly decreased. In vivo, myeloid cells in solid ovarian cancer tissue were found to express CD39 whereas CD73 was mainly detected on stromal fibroblasts. Ex situ-TAMs and in vitro differentiated TAM-like cells, however, upregulated the expression of CD39 and CD73 compared to monocytes or M1 macrophages. Expression of ectonucleotidases also translated into increased levels of biologically active adenosine. Accordingly, co-incubation with these TAMs suppressed CD4+ T cell proliferation which could be rescued via blockade of CD39 or CD73. Conclusion Adenosine generated by OvCA cells likely contributes to the recruitment of TAMs which further amplify adenosine-dependent immunosuppression via additional ectonucleotidase activity. In solid ovarian cancer tissue, TAMs express CD39 while CD73 is found on stromal fibroblasts. Accordingly, small molecule inhibitors of CD39 or CD73 could improve immune responses in ovarian cancer.}, language = {en} } @phdthesis{MontalbandelBarrio2015, author = {Montalb{\´a}n del Barrio, Itsaso}, title = {Immunosuppressive role of adenosine produced by ectonucleotidases CD39 and CD73 in ovarian cancer, tumor associated macrophages and the host immune system}, url = {http://nbn-resolving.de/urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-133268}, school = {Universit{\"a}t W{\"u}rzburg}, year = {2015}, abstract = {Eierstockkrebs ist der Tumor mit der schlechtesten Heilungsprognose unter allen gyn{\"a}kologischen Malignomen. Allein in Deutschland verursacht er {\"u}ber 6000 Tote pro Jahr. Patienten mit Ovarialkarzinom zeigen erst in einem sehr fortgeschrittenen Stadium charakteristische Symptome. Die einzig m{\"o}glichen Behandlungsmethoden sind dann die operative Tumorentfernung und die Verabreichung von platinbasierter Chemotherapien sowie von Anthrazyklinen. Da die aktuelle 5-Jahres-{\"U}berlebensrate lediglich 20-40\% betr{\"a}gt, besteht ein dringender Bedarf an neuen therapeutischen Optionen. Seit herausgefunden wurde, dass immunologische Parameter das {\"U}berleben der Patienten beeinflussen, ist Immuntherapie zu einer der vielversprechendsten Behandlungsarten des Eierstockkrebs geworden. Das Ziel unserer Forschung ist die {\"U}berwindung der Immunevasion des Tumors durch ein Verhindern der immun-unterdr{\"u}ckenden Mechanismen des Tumors. Im Speziellen befasst sich diese Arbeit mit dem Einfluss von Adenosin, das durch die Ectonukleotidasen CD39 und CD73 in der Mikroumgebung des Tumors gebildet wird. Die CD39- und CD73-Expression der Zellen f{\"u}hrt zu Immunosuppression da diese Ectonukleotidasen immun-stimulierendes, extrazellul{\"a}res ATP in immunsuppressives Adenosin umwandeln. Dies wurde zuerst als Effektormechanismus f{\"u}r regulatorische T-Zellen beschrieben, kann aber auch im Tumormikromilieu von Bedeutung sein. Mit dem Wissen, dass Tumorzellen von Eierstockkrebs-Patientinnen große Mengen der ATP-unterdr{\"u}ckenden Ectonukleotidasen CD39 und CD73 bilden, analysierten wir die adenosinvermittelte Unterdr{\"u}ckendung von Immunantwortenin der Mikroumgebung der Tumorzellen. Im Vergleich zu regulatorischen T Zellen konnten wir bei Eierstockkrebs-Zelllinien und bei aus Aszites gewonnenen Krebszellen eine 30- bis 60-fache Adenosinproduktion messen. Um diesen mutmaßlichen Immunevasions-Mechanismus zu best{\"a}tigen, untersuchten wir seine Auswirkungen auf mehrere Immunzellenpopulationen. CSFE-basierte Experimente zeigten zum Beispiel eine Hemmung der CD4+ T-Zell-Proliferation durch Adenosin, welches von Eierstockkrebs-Zellen produziert wurde. In diesem Zusammenhang haben wir auch eine in-vitro Methode entwickelt, mit der wir die Beeinflussung von Makrophagen durch Eierstockkrebszellen analysieren und modulieren konnten. Neben seiner suppressiven Wirkung {\"u}bt Adenosin auch chemotaktische Effekte auf menschliche Monozyten aus und lockt wahrscheinlich myeloide Vorl{\"a}uferzellen zum Tumorgewebe. Anschließend differenzieren sich menschliche Monozyten in einer von Eierstockkrebszellen geformten Mikroumgebung zu M2 Makrophagen oder tumor-assoziierten Makrophagen (TAMs), die ihrerseits erhebliche Mengen der Adenosin-produzierenden Ectonukleotidasen CD39 und CD73 bilden. W{\"a}hrend wir die Regulierung der Ectonukleotidasen-Expression untersuchten, entdeckten wir auch, dass klinisch genutzte Techniken zur Behandlung von Eierstockkrebs (zum Beispiel die Anwendung von Doxorubicin oder Bestrahlung) in vitro das CD73- und CD39-Level von Eierstockkrebs- und Immunzellen beeinflussen. In dieser Studie zeigen wir, wie dieser behandlungsbedingte Wechsel des ATP/Adenosine-Verh{\"a}ltnisses die Effektorfunktion verschiedener Immunzellen moduliert. Dar{\"u}ber hinaus untersuchen wir den potentiellen Vorteil von klinisch verf{\"u}gbaren, niedermolekularen Inhibitoren f{\"u}r CD39 und CD73, die die Immunsuppression in der Mikroumgebung des Tumors partiell aufheben k{\"o}nnten, und die vor allem in Kombination mit g{\"a}ngigen Behandlungsschemata von großem Interesse sein k{\"o}nnten.}, subject = {Eierstockkrebs}, language = {en} } @article{HaeuslerdelBarrioDiessneretal.2014, author = {H{\"a}usler, Sebastian F. M. and del Barrio, Itsaso Montalb{\´a}n and Diessner, Joachim and Stein, Roland G. and Strohschein, Jenny and H{\"o}nig, Arnd and Dietl, Johannes and Wischhusen, J{\"o}rg}, title = {Anti-CD39 and anti-CD73 antibodies A1 and 7G2 improve targeted therapy in ovarian cancer by blocking adenosine-dependent immune evasion}, series = {American Journal of Translational Research}, volume = {6}, journal = {American Journal of Translational Research}, number = {2}, issn = {1943-8141}, url = {http://nbn-resolving.de/urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-120016}, pages = {129-139}, year = {2014}, abstract = {The ectonucleotidases CD39 and CD73 degrade ATP to adenosine which inhibits immune responses via the \(A_{2A}\) adenosine receptor (ADORA2A) on T and NK cells. The current study investigates the potential therapeutic use of the specific anti CD39- and anti CD73-antibodies A1 (CD39) and 7G2 (CD73) as these two ectonucleotidases are overexpressed in ovarian cancer (OvCA). As expected, NK cell cytotoxicity against the human ovarian cancer cell lines OAW-42 or SK-OV-3 was significantly increased in the presence of A1 or 7G2 antibody. While this might partly be due to antibody-dependent cell-mediated cytotoxicity, a luciferase-dependent assay for quantifying biologically active adenosine further showed that A1 and 7G2 can inhibit CD39 and CD73-dependent adenosine-generation. In turn, the reduction in adenosine levels achieved by addition of A1 and 7G2 to OAW-42 or SK-OV-3 cells was found to de-inhibit the proliferation of \(CD4^+\) T cells in coculture with OvCA cells. Likewise, blocking of CD39 and CD73 on OvCA cells via A1 and 7G2 led to an increased cytotoxicity of alloreactive primed T cells. Thus, antibodies like A1 and 7G2 could improve targeted therapy in ovarian cancer not only by specifically labeling overexpressed antigens but also by blocking adenosine-dependent immune evasion in this immunogenic malignancy.}, language = {en} }