Aggressive behaviours of solid tumours are highly influenced by the tumour microenvironment. Multiple signalling pathways can affect the normal function of stromal fibroblasts in tumours, but how these events are coordinated to generate tumour-promoting cancer-associated fibroblasts (CAFs) is not well understood. Here we show that stromal expression of Dickkopf-3 (DKK3) is associated with aggressive breast, colorectal and ovarian cancers. We demonstrate that DKK3 is a HSF1 effector that modulates the pro-tumorigenic behaviour of CAFs in vitro and in vivo. DKK3 orchestrates a concomitant activation of β-catenin and YAP/TAZ. Whereas β-catenin is dispensable for CAF-mediated ECM remodelling, cancer cell growth and invasion, DKK3-driven YAP/TAZ activation is required to induce tumour-promoting phenotypes. Mechanistically, DKK3 in CAFs acts via canonical Wnt signalling by interfering with the negative regulator Kremen and increasing cell-surface levels of LRP6. This work reveals an unpredicted link between HSF1, Wnt signalling and YAP/TAZ relevant for the generation of tumour-promoting CAFs.
Objective:Ovarian cancer (OC) is often diagnosed at an advanced stage with two thirds of patients experiencing recurrent disease with a poor prognosis. Adoptive cell therapy (ACT) with tumor-infiltrating lymphocytes (TIL) has shown curative potential in malignant melanoma, but has only been investigated scarcely in other cancers. In this pilot study, we tested TIL based ACT in patients with metastatic OC. Methods:Six patients with progressive platinum-resistant metastatic OC were treated with an infusion of TIL preceded by standard lymphodepleting chemotherapy and followed by decrescendo intravenous interleukin-2 (IL-2). Primarily, the feasibility and tolerability of the treatment was assessed. Secondarily, disease control rate was described and immune responses against tumor cells were monitored. Results:Treatment was well tolerated with manageable toxicities. Four patients had stable disease for three months and two patients for five months with five patients having a decrease in target lesions. Progression was primarily due to new lesions while target lesions in general remained stable or in regression. Antitumor reactivity was observed in TIL infusion products from five patients but no antitumor reactivity was detectable in peripheral blood lymphocytes collected after treatment. High numbers of infused TIL expressed exhaustion markers including LAG3 and PD-1, and immunostaining of tumor tissue demonstrated substantial MHCII and PD-L1 expression. Conclusions:ACT with TIL in combination with decrescendo IL-2 is feasible in patients with metastatic OC. Early indications of clinical activity were found. However, TIL ACT efficacy was incomplete with possible involvement of the inhibitory immune checkpoint pathways LAG3/MHCII and PD1/PD-L1.
Tumor-reactive T cells appear to heavily infiltrate the tumor microenvironment of patients who failed previous CPI treatment. These patients can still respond to an infusion of unselected autologous TILs. Our results warrant further testing of novel immune re-activation strategies in melanoma patients who failed multiple CPI therapy.
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