OncoImmunology (Apr 2017)

Characterization of a human anti-tumoral NK cell population expanded after BCG treatment of leukocytes

  • Eva M. García-Cuesta,
  • Gloria Esteso,
  • Omodele Ashiru,
  • Sheila López-Cobo,
  • Mario Álvarez-Maestro,
  • Ana Linares,
  • Mei M. Ho,
  • Luis Martínez-Piñeiro,
  • Hugh T. Reyburn,
  • Mar Valés-Gómez

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1080/2162402X.2017.1293212
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 6, no. 4

Abstract

Read online

Immunotherapy, via intra-vesical instillations of BCG, is the therapy of choice for patients with high-risk non-muscle invasive bladder cancer. The subsequent recruitment of lymphocytes and myeloid cells, as well as the release of cytokines and chemokines, is believed to induce a local immune response that eliminates these tumors, but the detailed mechanisms of action of this therapy are not well understood. Here, we have studied the phenotype and function of the responding lymphocyte populations as well as the spectrum of cytokines and chemokines produced in an in vitro model of human peripheral blood mononuclear cells (PBMCs) co-cultured with BCG. Natural killer (NK) cell activation was a prominent feature of this immune response and we have studied the expansion of this lymphocyte population in detail. We show that, after BCG stimulation, CD56dim NK cells proliferate, upregulate CD56, but maintain the expression of CD16 and the ability to mediate ADCC. CD56bright NK cells also contribute to this expansion by increasing CD16 and KIR expression. These unconventional CD56bright cells efficiently degranulated against bladder cancer cells and the expansion of this population required the release of soluble factors by other immune cells in the context of BCG. Consistent with these in vitro data, a small, but significant increase in the intensity of CD16 expression was noted in peripheral blood CD56bright cells from bladder cancer patients undergoing BCG therapy, that was not observed in patients treated with mitomycin-C instillations. These observations suggest that activation of NK cells may be an important component of the anti-tumoral immune response triggered by BCG therapy in bladder cancer.

Keywords