Abstract

Indications for immunotherapies are still unclear, and there is a great need for real-time patient immune status monitoring. In this study, we confirmed that the local and systemic immune profiles of an orthotopic osteosarcoma model with or without luciferase transfection were statistically equivalent. Next, we used flow cytometry to describe systemic immune cell populations influenced by osteosarcoma disease progression. When compared to vehicle-inoculated sham mice, it was found that tumor-bearing mice had significant immunophenotype disturbances at approximately 11 weeks after inoculation (at which time 90% of primary tumor-bearing mice have fulminant pulmonary metastases). Percent populations of natural killer cells and T regulatory cells were increased in the spleens of tumor-bearing mice (p < 0.0083) compared to shams. Additionally, T lymphocytes from spleens of tumor-bearing mice showed increased Tim-3/PD-1 exhaustion status (p < 0.0083). There were also increases in the percent populations of myeloid cells and overall M1/M2 macrophage marker expression on tumor-bearing mice spleens versus controls (p < 0.00714). Finally, treatment with 20 μg α-PD-L1 decreased T-cell exhaustion back to sham status, with a corresponding increase in CTLA-4 expression on cytotoxic T cells in the majority of mice tested. Checkpoint inhibition also increased splenic monocyte maturation and returned macrophage M1/M2 marker expression back to sham status. These data suggest that cancer induces systemic immune dysregulation and that these changes may be elucidated and utilized for treatment purposes by sampling the systemic immune environment via the spleen. In addition, treatment with the checkpoint inhibitor α-PD-L1 may neutralize but not overcome the systemic immunological changes induced by a progressing malignancy.

Highlights

  • Osteosarcoma is an extremely aggressive tumor of bone, and no new therapeutics have been implemented clinically in over three decades [1]

  • Our laboratory previously developed an orthotopic model of metastatic osteosarcoma using BALB/c syngeneic K7M2 tumor cells transfected with a luciferase reporter for realtime disease monitoring using IVIS. is model allows for sensitive visualization and assessment of primary and metastatic lesions without euthanasia in an immunocompetent mouse

  • Whenever a foreign reporter protein is introduced into in vivo systems, there is the potential for it to interfere with normal immune processes; this aspect of tumor immunology is often overlooked in the literature even though it has the potential to invalidate conclusions. As this manuscript focuses on elucidating the antitumor responses, we provide evidence to support that introduction of a luciferase reporter did not dramatically alter the antitumor immune response. e white blood cell (WBC) populations examined in Panel 1 presented a broad overview of key mediators of tumor immunology including natural killer (NK) cells, CTLs, s, T regulatory cells (Tregs), and myeloid lineage cells (MLCs)

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Summary

Introduction

Osteosarcoma is an extremely aggressive tumor of bone, and no new therapeutics have been implemented clinically in over three decades [1]. From the few studies currently available on osteosarcoma tumor immunology, data have emerged that support the importance of macrophage M1/M2 polarization and T-cell exhaustion and activation in tumor clearance, the scope has generally been limited to the primary lesions [11, 13,14,15,16,17,18,19,20,21] We suggest that these data warrant further investigation regarding the translation of macrophage-T cell dynamics systemically and how we might use this information clinically to trigger antitumor immunity in patients. We investigated the systemic effects of monotherapy with checkpoint blockade of PD-L1 using the spleen as a barometer of immune status

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