Ovarian cancer progression is controlled by phenotypic changes in dendritic cells. Academic Article uri icon

Overview

abstract

  • We characterized the initiation and evolution of the immune response against a new inducible p53-dependent model of aggressive ovarian carcinoma that recapitulates the leukocyte infiltrates and cytokine milieu of advanced human tumors. Unlike other models that initiate tumors before the development of a mature immune system, we detect measurable anti-tumor immunity from very early stages, which is driven by infiltrating dendritic cells (DCs) and prevents steady tumor growth for prolonged periods. Coinciding with a phenotypic switch in expanding DC infiltrates, tumors aggressively progress to terminal disease in a comparatively short time. Notably, tumor cells remain immunogenic at advanced stages, but anti-tumor T cells become less responsive, whereas their enduring activity is abrogated by different microenvironmental immunosuppressive DCs. Correspondingly, depleting DCs early in the disease course accelerates tumor expansion, but DC depletion at advanced stages significantly delays aggressive malignant progression. Our results indicate that phenotypically divergent DCs drive both immunosurveillance and accelerated malignant growth. We provide experimental support for the cancer immunoediting hypothesis, but we also show that aggressive cancer progression after a comparatively long latency period is primarily driven by the mobilization of immunosuppressive microenvironmental leukocytes, rather than loss of tumor immunogenicity.

publication date

  • February 20, 2012

Research

keywords

  • Dendritic Cells
  • Ovarian Neoplasms

Identity

PubMed Central ID

  • PMC3302234

Scopus Document Identifier

  • 84858793263

Digital Object Identifier (DOI)

  • 10.1056/NEJMoa020177

PubMed ID

  • 22351930

Additional Document Info

volume

  • 209

issue

  • 3