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Adrenocortical carcinoma (ACC) is a rare, but highly aggressive endocrine malignancy. Tumor-related hypercortisolism is present in 60 % of patients and associated with worse outcome. While cancer immunotherapies have revolutionized the treatment of many cancer entities, the results of initial studies of different immune checkpoint inhibitors in ACC were heterogeneous. Up to now, five small clinical trials with a total of 121 patients have been published and demonstrated an objective response in only 17 patients. However, one of the studies, by Raj et al., reported a clinically meaningful disease control rate of 52 % and a median overall survival of almost 25 months suggesting that a subgroup of ACC patients may benefit from immunotherapeutic approaches. Following the hypothesis that some ACCs are characterized by a glucocorticoid-induced T lymphocytes depletion, several studies were performed as part of the presented thesis. First, the immune cell infiltration in a large cohort of 146 ACC specimens was investigated. It was demonstrated for the first time, and against the common assumption, that ACCs were infiltrated not only by FoxP3+ regulatory T cells (49.3 %), but also that a vast majority of tumor samples was infiltrated by CD4+ TH cells (74 %) and CD8+ cytotoxic T cells (84.3 %), albeit the immune cell number varied heterogeneously and was rather low (median: 7.7 CD3+ T cells / high power field, range: 0.1-376). Moreover, the presence of CD3+-, CD4+- and CD8+ ACC-infiltrating lymphocytes was associated with an improved recurrence-free (HR: 0.31 95 % CI 0.11-0.82) and overall survival (HR: 0.47 96 % CI 0.25-0.87). Particularly, patients with tumor-infiltrating CD4+ TH cells without glucocorticoid excess had a significantly longer overall survival compared to patients with T cell-depleted ACC and hypercortisolism (121 vs. 27 months, p = 0.004). Hence, the impact of glucocorticoids might to some extent be responsible for the modest immunogenicity in ACC as hypercortisolism was reversely correlated with the number of CD4+ TH cells. Accordingly, CD3+ T cells co-cultured with steroidogenic NCI-H295R ACC cells demonstrated in vitro an enhanced anti-tumoral cytotoxicity by secreting 747.96 ±225.53 pg/ml IFN-γ in a therapeutically hormone-depleted microenvironment (by incubation with metyrapone), versus only 276.02 ±117.46 pg/ml IFN-γ in a standard environment with glucocorticoid excess.
Other potential biomarkers to predict response to immunotherapies are the immunomodulatory checkpoint molecules, programmed cell death 1 (PD-1) and its ligand PD-L1, since both are targets of antibodies used therapeutically in different cancer entities. In a subcohort of 129 ACCs, expressions of both molecules were heterogeneous (PD-1 17.4 %, range 1-15; PD-L1 24.4 %, range 1 - 90) and rather low. Interestingly, PD-1 expression significantly influenced ACC patients´ overall (HR: 0.21 95 % CI 0.53-0.84) and progression- free survival (HR: 0.30 95 % CI 0.13-0.72) independently of established factors, like ENSAT tumor stage, resection status, Ki67 proliferation index and glucocorticoid excess, while PD-L1 had no impact.
In conclusion, this study provides several potential explanations for the heterogeneous results of the immune checkpoint therapy in advanced ACC. In addition, the establishment of PD-1 as prognostic marker can be easily applied in routine clinical care, because it is nowadays anyway part of a detailed histo-pathological work-up. Furthermore, these results provide the rationale and will pave the way towards a combination therapy using immune checkpoint inhibitors as well as glucocorticoid blockers. This will increase the likelihood of re-activating the immunological anti-tumor potential in ACC. However, this will have to be demonstrated by additional preclinical in vivo experiments and finally in clinical trials with patients.
MDSCs are suppressive immune cells with a high relevance in various pathologies including cancer, autoimmunity, and chronic infections. Surface marker expression of MDSCs resembles monocytes and neutrophils which have immunostimulatory functions instead of suppressing T cells. Therefore, finding specific surface markers for MDSCs is important for MDSC research and therapeutic MDSC manipulation. In this study, we analyzed if the integrin VLA-1 has the potential as a novel MDSC marker. VLA-1 was expressed by M-MDSCs but not by G-MDSCs as well as by Teff cells. VLA-1 deficiency did not impact iNOS expression, the distribution of M-MDSC and G-MDSC subsets, and the suppressive capacity of MDSCs towards naïve and Teff cells in vitro. In mice, VLA-1 had no effect on the homing capability of MDSCs to the spleen, which is a major reservoir for MDSCs. Since the splenic red pulp contains collagen IV and VLA-1 binds collagen IV with a high affinity, we found MDSCs and Teff cells in this area as expected. We showed that T cell suppression in the spleen, indicated by reduced T cell recovery and proliferation as well as increased apoptosis and cell death, partially depended on VLA-1 expression by the MDSCs. In a mouse model of multiple sclerosis, MDSC injection prior to disease onset led to a decrease of the disease score, and this effect was significantly reduced when MDSCs were VLA-1 deficient. The expression of Sema7A by Teff cells, a ligand for VLA-1 which is implicated in negative T cell regulation, resulted in a slightly stronger Teff cell suppression by MDSCs compared to Sema7A deficient T cells. Live cell imaging and intravital 2-photon microscopy showed that the interaction time of MDSCs and Teff cells was shorter when MDSCs lacked VLA 1 expression, however VLA-1 expression had no impact on MDSC mobility. Therefore, the VLA-1-dependent interaction of MDSC and Teff cells on collagen IV in the splenic red pulp is implicated MDSC-mediated Teff cell suppression.
Polymorphonuclear neutrophils (PMNs) are phagocytic cells of the innate immune system that efficiently kill bacteria. However, they also have regulatory effects on other immune cells and contribute to immunosuppression in cancer, which worsens the outcome. In particular, this has been demonstrated for a subset of granulocytic cells called myeloid- derived suppressor cells (MDSCs), but its distinction from PMNs is controversial. Most authors have explored the suppressive effects of MDSCs on T cells, but recent data suggest that NK cells are also affected. NK cells are crucial for the combat of tumor cells, in particular leukemic cells. There is hardly data available on the interaction between NK cells and suppressive granulocytic cells. Therefore, the aim of this thesis was to explore the effects of MDSCs and PMNs on the NK cell function against the leukemia cell line K562.
In co-culture experiments, I demonstrate that granulocytic MDSCs and PMNs had similar effects on NK cell function and homeostasis. On the one hand, they positively influenced the survival and maturation of NK cells. On the other, they inhibited the activation, cytotoxicity and cytokine production of NK cells, both IFNγ and TNFα, in response to K562 target cells. Furthermore, I show a down-regulation of the activating receptor NKp30 on NK cells in the presence of MDSCs or PMNs, which may form part of the underlying suppressive mechanisms.
However, there is also evidence for the involvement of other molecules. Further investigations are needed to confirm a relevant suppression of NK cells by granulocytic cells in cancer patients, and to identify therapeutic targets. The recognition that regular PMNs have similar effects on NK cells as MDSCs could simplify future experiments, since MDSCs are heterogeneous and laborious to isolate and identify.
NKcells and granulocytes are among the first immune cells to reconstitute after hematopoietic stem cell transplantation, and NK cells may be particularly exposed to suppressive effects of granulocytes this scenario. Modulating these suppressive effects of granulocytes on NK cells therapeutically may yield a better NK cell function and an improved cancer prognosis.

Ovarian cancer (OvCa) is the tumor with the most unfavourable prognosis among all gynaecological malignancies causing more than 6000 deaths per year in Germany alone. Patients with OvCa show symptoms at very advanced stages of tumor progression when the only available treatments consist on tumor debulking surgery and administration of platinum based chemotherapeutics and anthracyclins. There is an urgent need to develop new therapeutical strategies since the actual 5 year survival rate of OvCa patients does not exceed 20-40%.
Immunotherapy is a promising approach for treatment of ovarian cancer, since it has been observed that immunological parameters can influence the outcome of the patient. The aim of our research is to overcome tumor immune escape by counteracting the immunosuppressive mechanisms developed by the tumor. In particular, this work studies the influence of adenosine generated by the ectonucleotidases CD39 and CD73 in the tumor microenvironment. Cellular expression of CD39 and CD73 contributes to immunosupression as these ectonucleotidases convert immune-stimulatory extracellular ATP into immunosuppressive adenosine. This was primarily described as effector mechanism for regulatory T cells, but may also be important in the tumor microenvironment.
Having found that tumor cells from OvCa-patients express high levels of ATP-depleting ectonucleotidases CD39 and CD73 we set out to investigate a potential immunosuppressive mechanism via adenosine production in the tumor microenvironment. We could measure 30-60 times higher adenosine production by OvCa cell lines and ascites-derived cancer cells as compared to physiological normal conditions. To confirm this putative immune escape mechanism we investigated its effect on several immune cell populations. CFSE-based assays, for example, showed an inhibition of CD4+ T cell proliferation by OvCA cell-derived adenosine. In this context, we have further established an in-vitro assay, where OvCa cells modulate the function of macrophages towards a M2 or tumor associated (TAM) phenotype. Together with the phenotype modulation adenosine exerts chemotactic effects on human monocytes and is thus likely to attract myeloid precursor cells towards the tumor tissue. Moreover, in a microenvironment that is shaped by OvCa cells, human monocytes differentiate into M2 macrophages or TAMs which themselves express significant levels of the adenosine-generating ectonucleotidases CD39 and CD73.
Investigating the regulation of ectonucleotidase expression, we also observed that approaches clinically used to treat OvCa (namely application of doxorubicine or irradiation) influence CD73 and CD39 levels of OvCa and immune cells in vitro. In this study we show how this treatment-induced change in the ATP/adenosine ratio modulates the effector function of different immune cells. Furthermore, we investigate the potential benefit of clinically available small molecule inhibitors for CD39 and CD73 that could relieve immunosuppression in the tumor microenvironment especially in combination with common treatment regimes.