Human lung cancer-derived immunosuppressive plasmacytoid dendritic cells release IL-1α in an AIM2 inflammasome-dependent manner.
Sorrentino. Rosalinda R; Terlizzi. Michela M; Di Crescenzo. Vincenzo G VG; Popolo. Ada A; Pecoraro. Michela M; Perillo. Giuseppe G; Galderisi. Antonio A; Pinto. Aldo A
Key Findings
- LL‑37 inhibits AIM2 inflammasome activation in tumor‑associated plasmacytoid dendritic cells
- Blocking AIM2 lowers IL‑1α release, which otherwise promotes tumor cell growth
- The reduction of IL‑1α by LL‑37 does not depend on NLRP3 inhibition
Practical Outcomes
- For most biohackers, this study offers limited direct use because it focuses on lung cancer cells, not general health. It does hint that LL‑37 might have anti‑inflammatory properties, but no clear dosage or safe protocol for everyday use is provided.
Summary
Researchers found that a protein called LL‑37 can block a specific inflammation pathway (AIM2 inflammasome) in immune cells that help lung tumors grow, reducing the release of the inflammatory molecule IL‑1α. This effect was seen in lab experiments with cells from lung cancer patients.
Abstract
Plasmacytoid dendritic cells (pDCs) highly populate lung tumor masses and are strictly correlated to bad prognosis, yet their role in lung cancer is controversial. To understand their role in lung cancer, we isolated pDCs from human samples of lung obtained from non-small cell lung cancer patients undergoing thoracic surgery. Tumor masses presented a higher percentage of pDCs than healthy tissues; pDCs were in the immunosuppressive phenotype, as determined by higher levels of CD33 and PD-L1. Despite higher HLA-A and HLA-D expression, cancerous pDCs did not exert cytotoxic activity against tumor cells but instead promoted their proliferation. In this scenario, cancerous pDCs were able to produce high levels of IL-1α. This effect was observed on the specific activation of the inflammasome absent in melanoma 2 (AIM2), which led to higher cytoplasmic calcium release responsible for calpain activation underlying IL-1α release. The blockade of type I interferon receptor and of AIM2 via the addition of LL-37 significantly reduced the release of IL-1α, which was still high after Nod-like receptor P3 inhibition via glibenclamide. More important, mitochondrial-derived reactive oxygen species sequester diminished AIM2-dependent IL-1α release. Our data demonstrate that lung tumor-associated pDCs are responsive to the activation of AIM2 that promotes calcium efflux and reactive oxygen species from mitochondria, leading to calpain activation and high levels of IL-1α, which facilitate tumor cell proliferation in the lung.
Study Information
pubmed
2015
2015-11-01T00:00:00.000Z
10.1016/j.ajpath.2015.07.009
89
32