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Inflammatory Cell Death, PANoptosis, Mediated by Cytokines in Diverse Cancer Lineages Inhibits Tumor Growth

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Authors

Malireddi, R.K. Subbarao; Karki, Rajendra; Sundaram, Balamurugan; Kancharana, Balabhaskararao; Lee, SangJoon; Samir, Parimal; Kanneganti, Thirumala-Devi

Issue Date
2021-07
Publisher
American Association of Immunologists, Inc.
Citation
ImmunoHorizons, Vol.5 No.7, pp.568-580
Abstract
Resistance to cell death is a hallmark of cancer. Immunotherapy, particularly immune checkpoint blockade therapy, drives immune-mediated cell death and has greatly improved treatment outcomes for some patients with cancer, but it often fails clinically. Its success relies on the cytokines and cytotoxic functions of effector immune cells to bypass the resistance to cell death and eliminate cancer cells. However, the specific cytokines capable of inducing cell death in tumors and the mechanisms that connect cytokines to cell death across cancer cell types remain unknown. In this study, we analyzed expression of several cytokines that are modulated in tumors and found correlations between cytokine expression and mortality. Of several cytokines tested for their ability to kill cancer cells, only TNF-a and IFN-y together were able to induce cell death in 13 distinct human cancer cell lines derived from colon and lung cancer, melanoma, and leukemia. Further evaluation of the specific programmed cell death pathways activated by TNF-a and IFN-y in these cancer lines identified PANoptosis, a form of inflammatory cell death that was previously shown to be activated by contemporaneous engagement of components from pyroptosis, apoptosis, and/or necroptosis. Specifically, TNF-a and IFN-ytriggered activation of gasdermin D, gasdermin E, caspase-8, caspase-3, caspase-7, and MLKL. Furthermore, the intratumoral administration of TNF-a and IFN-y suppressed the growth of transplanted xenograft tumors in an NSG mouse model. Overall, this study shows that PANoptosis, induced by synergism of TNF-a and IFN-g, is an important mechanism to kill cancer cells and suppress tumor growth that could be therapeutically targeted. ImmunoHorizons, 2021, 5: 568–580.
ISSN
2573-7732
URI
https://hdl.handle.net/10371/203000
DOI
https://doi.org/10.4049/immunohorizons.2100059
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  • College of Natural Sciences
  • School of Biological Sciences
Research Area Cytokine Storm, Host Defense, Innate Immunity in Metabolic and Inflammatory Diseases

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