Search Results

Now showing 1 - 2 of 2
Loading...
Thumbnail Image
Item

During early stages of cancer, neutrophils initiate anti-tumor immune responses in tumor-draining lymph nodes

2022, Pylaeva, Ekaterina, Korschunow, Georg, Spyra, Ilona, Bordbari, Sharareh, Siakaeva, Elena, Ozel, Irem, Domnich, Maksim, Squire, Anthony, Hasenberg, Anja, Thangavelu, Kruthika, Hussain, Timon, Goetz, Moritz, Lang, Karl S, Gunzer, Matthias, Hansen, Wiebke, Buer, Jan, Bankfalvi, Agnes, Lang, Stephan, Jablonska, Jadwiga

Tumor-draining lymph nodes (LNs) play a crucial role during cancer spread and in initiation of anti-cancer adaptive immunity. Neutrophils form a substantial population of cells in LNs with poorly understood functions. Here, we demonstrate that, during head and neck cancer (HNC) progression, tumor-associated neutrophils transmigrate to LNs and shape anti-tumor responses in a stage-dependent manner. In metastasis-free stages (N0), neutrophils develop an antigen-presenting phenotype (HLA-DR+CD80+CD86+ICAM1+PD-L1-) and stimulate T cells (CD27+Ki67highPD-1-). LN metastases release GM-CSF and via STAT3 trigger development of PD-L1+ immunosuppressive neutrophils, which repress T cell responses. The accumulation of neutrophils in T cell-rich zones of LNs in N0 constitutes a positive predictor for 5-year survival, while increased numbers of neutrophils in LNs of N1-3 stages predict poor prognosis in HNC. These results suggest a dual role of neutrophils as essential regulators of anti-cancer immunity in LNs and argue for approaches fostering immunostimulatory activity of these cells during cancer therapy.

Loading...
Thumbnail Image
Item

Ischemic stroke and concomitant gastrointestinal complications- a fatal combination for patient recovery

2022, Tuz, Ali A., Hasenberg, Anja, Hermann, Dirk M., Gunzer, Matthias, Singh, Vikramjeet

Stroke is primarily a neurodegenerative disease but can also severely impact the functions of other vital organs and deteriorate disease outcomes. A malfunction of the gastrointestinal tract (GIT), commonly observed in stroke patients, is often characterized by severe bowel obstruction, intestinal microbiota changes and inflammation. Over-activated immune cells after stroke are the major contributors to endorse intestinal inflammation and may induce damage to single-layer epithelial cell barriers. The post-stroke leakage of intestinal barriers may allow the translocation and dissemination of resident microflora to systemic organs and cause sepsis. This overshooting systemic immune reaction fuels ongoing inflammation in the degenerating brain and slows recovery. Currently, the therapeutic options to treat these GIT-associated anomalies are very limited and further research is required to develop novel treatments. In this mini-review, we first discuss the current knowledge from clinical studies and experimental stroke models that provide strong evidence of the existence of post-stroke GIT complications. Then, we review the literature regarding novel therapeutic approaches that might help to maintain GIT homeostasis and improve neurological outcomes in stroke patients.