Abstract

Simple SummaryImmune therapy is designed to stimulate tumoricidal effects in a variety of solid tumors including breast carcinomas. However, the emergence of resistant clones leads to treatment failure. Understanding the molecular, cellular, and microenvironmental aberrations is crucial to uncovering underlying mechanisms and developing advanced strategies for preventing or combating these resistant malignancies. This review will summarize research findings revealing various mechanisms employed to hijack innate and adaptive immune surveillance mechanisms, develop hypoxic and tumor promoting metabolism, and foster an immune tolerance microenvironment. In addition, it will highlight potential targets for therapeutic approaches.Breast cancer is the most common malignancy among females in western countries, where women have an overall lifetime risk of >10% for developing invasive breast carcinomas. It is not a single disease but is composed of distinct subtypes associated with different clinical outcomes and is highly heterogeneous in both the molecular and clinical aspects. Although tumor initiation is largely driven by acquired genetic alterations, recent data suggest microenvironment-mediated immune evasion may play an important role in neoplastic progression. Beyond surgical resection, radiation, and chemotherapy, additional therapeutic options include hormonal deactivation, targeted-signaling pathway treatment, DNA repair inhibition, and aberrant epigenetic reversion. Yet, the fatality rate of metastatic breast cancer remains unacceptably high, largely due to treatment resistance and metastases to brain, lung, or bone marrow where tumor bed penetration of therapeutic agents is limited. Recent studies indicate the development of immune-oncological therapy could potentially eradicate this devastating malignancy. Evidence suggests tumors express immunogenic neoantigens but the immunity towards these antigens is frequently muted. Established tumors exhibit immunological tolerance. This tolerance reflects a process of immune suppression elicited by the tumor, and it represents a critical obstacle towards successful antitumor immunotherapy. In general, immune evasive mechanisms adapted by breast cancer encompasses down-regulation of antigen presentations or recognition, lack of immune effector cells, obstruction of anti-tumor immune cell maturation, accumulation of immunosuppressive cells, production of inhibitory cytokines, chemokines or ligands/receptors, and up-regulation of immune checkpoint modulators. Together with altered metabolism and hypoxic conditions, they constitute a permissive tumor microenvironment. This article intends to discern representative incidents and to provide potential innovative therapeutic regimens to reinstate tumoricidal immunity.

Highlights

  • Female breast cancer (BC) is the most diagnosed malignancy, with approximately 2.3 million new cases (11.7% of all cancer incidences) worldwide in 2020

  • In BC, neoantigen recognition may result in the emergence of an inhibitory receptor known as cytotoxic T lymphocytes (CTL)-associated protein 4 (CTLA-4), which is translocated to the cell surface

  • By triggering a negative feedback loop and weakening the immune surveillance effect, CTLA-4 is widely recognized as a crucial regulator of T cell self-tolerance and immune evasion leading to poor prognosis [56,57]

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Summary

Introduction

Female breast cancer (BC) is the most diagnosed malignancy, with approximately 2.3 million new cases (11.7% of all cancer incidences) worldwide in 2020. Based on the estrogen receptor (ER), progesterone receptor (PR), human epidermal growth factor receptor 2 (HER2), as well as a BC proliferation index Ki67, our understanding of BC biology reveals 4 intrinsic molecular subtypes They include luminal A (resembling the histological phenotype: ER+, PR+, HER2−, Ki67Low), luminal B (ER+, PR+, HER+/−, Ki67High), HER2-enriched (ER−, PR−, HER2+), and basal-like subtype (ER−, PR−, HER2−) which largely resembles triple-negative BC (TNBC) and comprises approximately 15% of all BC cases [2]. All human nucleated cells process their intracellular proteins through the proteasome system and present the degraded peptide fragments (the epitopes) on the major histocompatibility complex (MHC)-I. This immune complex is scrutinized by surveillance lymphocytes. The authors regret that some related findings cannot be discussed in this report

Initial Anti-Tumor Immunity Defeats Breast Neoplasm
Breast Cancer Reprograms Tumoricidal Immunity
Aberrant Immune Checkpoint Modulators
CTLA-4
PD-1 and PD-L1
Dysregulated Cytokines and Chemokines
Altered Signaling Pathways
Aberrant Metabolism
Hypoxia Conveys Tumor Cell Plasticity
Radiation Influences Tumoricidal Immunity
Findings
Conclusions
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