Tumor-associated macrophages (TAM) play an indispensable role in the modulation of the cancer immune microenvironment. Despite the fact that TAMs may exert both antitumor and protumor activities, the molecular mechanisms involved remain poorly understood. Here, we characterized a subpopulation of TAMs expressing dendritic cell-specific C-type lectin (DC-SIGN) and investigated its relevance to the prognosis and immune microenvironment of muscle-invasive bladder cancer (MIBC). DC-SIGN þ TAMs were abundant in a significant proportion of human MIBC specimens. High levels of DC-SIGN þ TAMs were associated with dismal prognosis and unresponsiveness to adjuvant chemotherapy in MIBC. Notably, multiple anti-inflammatory cytokines were enriched in DC-SIGN þ TAMs. RNA-seq analysis revealed that multiple M2-like signal-ing pathways were significantly upregulated in DC-SIGN þ TAMs. High infiltration of DC-SIGN þ TAMs was associated with CD8 þ T-cell tolerance in MIBC. Moreover, abrogating DC-SIGN function using a neutralizing antibody led to impaired expression of anti-inflammatory cytokines and augmented PD-1 inhibitor pembrolizumab-mediated cytotoxic effects of CD8 þ T cells toward MIBC cells. In summary, these results suggest that DC-SIGN þ TAM infiltration is closely linked to a protumor immune microenvironment and may serve as a promising therapeutic target in the immunotherapy of MIBC.Significance: DC-SIGN þ TAMs have an immunosuppressive and tumor-promoting function and may serve as a prognostic indicator and therapeutic target in MIBC.
Hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) is a major type of primary liver cancer and the sixth most prevalent human malignancies worldwide. However, the molecular mechanisms underlying hepatocarcinogenesis remain unclear. For HCC patients, there is not only a lack of effective therapeutic targets but also a lack of predictive or prognostic biomarkers. In this article, we reported that TRIM32 was obviously upregulated in HCC tumor tissues and HCC cell lines. Its expression patterns were positively correlated with histological grade, tumor sizes, and HBsAg of HCC patients. TRIM32 expression was a significant predictor for the overall survival time of HCC patients. Moreover, the overexpression of TRIM32 in cells accelerated the G1-S phase transition, promoted cell proliferation rates, and induced the resistance of HCC patients to oxaliplatin. All these findings suggest that TRIM32 might play important roles in the hepatocarcinogenesis. TRIM32 could be a novel direction to explore the mechanism underlying HCC pathogenesis.
Our previous data had shown that Dickkopf-1 (DKK1) combined with β-catenin was a novel prognostic predictor for hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) patients. However, the role and mechanism of DKK1 in HCC recurrence or metastasis remain poorly understand. This study was to assess the role of DKK1 in tumor metastasis for patients with hepatocellular carcinoma after orthotopic liver transplantation (OLT). The expression of DKK1 protein was detected in hepatic cell lines, HCC cell lines, and HCC patients after OLT with different potential of metastasis. After DKK1 expression in the HCCLM3 cells was downregulated by siRNA-mediated approach, the role of DKK1 in cell invasion and metastasis was investigated. cDNA genechip was used to analyze the differential expressed genes related with DKK1 in two pairs of HCC cells. The prognostic significance of DKK1 was further assessed by Kaplan-Meier and Cox regression analyses in 148 HCC patients after OLT. The expression of DKK1 protein was higher in the high-invasive HCC cells and HCC patients of the disease recurrence group. With the downregulation of DKK1, HCCLM3 cells showed decreased aggressiveness in vitro and lower metastatic ability in vivo. DKK1 could regulate many genes involved in biological processes and pathways related with tumor progression. Furthermore, DKK1 overexpression correlated with tumor microvessel density in clinical HCC samples. Multivariate analysis revealed that DKK1 was an independent prognostic indicator for overall survival and cumulative recurrence in this cohort of HCC patients post-OLT. Collectively, overexpression of DKK1 was implicated in invasion/metastasis of HCC after OLT and DKK1 overexpression may be potential molecular therapeutic targets for liver cancer.
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