Unique functional status of natural killer cells in metastatic stage IV melanoma patients and its modulation by chemotherapy Journal Article


Authors: Fregni, G.; Perier, A.; Pittari, G.; Jacobelli, S.; Sastre, X.; Gervois, N.; Allard, M.; Bercovici, N.; Avril, M. F.; Caignard, A.
Article Title: Unique functional status of natural killer cells in metastatic stage IV melanoma patients and its modulation by chemotherapy
Abstract: Purpose: Immunotherapy is an alternative for metastatic melanoma patients resistant to chemotherapy. Natural killer (NK) cells are powerful antileukemia effectors and their role in solid tumors is suspected. NK cell activation is regulated by a balance between activating receptors, which detect stress molecules on tumor cells, and HLA-I specific inhibitory receptors. Here, we studied the phenotype and function of NK cells in stage IV metastatic melanoma patients. Experimental Design: Circulating NK cells from 35 healthy donors and 51 patients were studied: 24 patients before chemotherapy (prechemotherapy), 17 patients 1 month after 1 to 4 lines of chemotherapy (postchemotherapy), and 10 patients analyzed pre- and postchemotherapy. NK functionality was carried out toward 2 primary metastatic melanoma cell lines, analyzed for the expression of NK receptor ligands. Results: NK cells from prechemotherapy patients exhibit an NKp46dim/NKG2Adim phenotype. In contrast, NK cells from postchemotherapy patients display high expression of NKp46 and NKG2A receptors. Purified NK cells from patients are efficiently activated in response to melanoma cells. Melanoma cells express different level of NKG2D ligands and HLA-I molecules. In agreements with their phenotype, NK cells from pre- and postchemotherapy patients present distinct functional status toward these primary melanoma cells. A dynamic label free assay was used to determine the pathways involved in the lysis of melanoma cells by IL-2-activated NK cells. NKG2D, NCR (natural cytotoxicity receptor), and DNAM-1 are involved in the NK-mediated lysis of melanoma cells. Conclusions: These results provide new arguments and clues to design NK cell-based immunotherapeutic strategies for melanoma patients. ©2011 AACR.
Keywords: adult; controlled study; protein expression; aged; unclassified drug; human cell; major clinical study; treatment duration; cancer staging; t lymphocyte; phenotype; interleukin 2; melanoma; cancer cell culture; immunotherapy; gamma interferon; antigen recognition; hla antigen class 1; melanoma cell; natural killer cell; natural killer cell receptor; natural killer cell receptor nkg2a; metastasis potential; cd3+ t lymphocyte; cytokine release; lymphocyte function; lymphocyte subpopulation; lymphocyte receptor; natural cytotoxicity receptor; natural killer cell receptor nkp46; protein dnam 1; cd56+ t lymphocyte
Journal Title: Clinical Cancer Research
Volume: 17
Issue: 9
ISSN: 1078-0432
Publisher: American Association for Cancer Research  
Date Published: 2011-05-01
Start Page: 2628
End Page: 2637
Language: English
DOI: 10.1158/1078-0432.ccr-10-2084
PROVIDER: scopus
PUBMED: 21224372
DOI/URL:
Notes: --- - "Export Date: 23 June 2011" - "CODEN: CCREF" - "Source: Scopus"
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