Interleukin 21 controls tumour growth and tumour immunosurveillance in colitis-associated tumorigenesis in mice

Background and aimsColitis-associated tumorigenesis is a balance between proliferation of tumour cells and tumour immunosurveillance. The role of T-helper-cell-derived cytokines in tumour growth is not fully understood. In this study the authors investigated the influence of interleukin (IL) 21 on i...

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Veröffentlicht in:Gut 2011-12, Vol.60 (12), p.1678-1686
Hauptverfasser: Jauch, Dominik, Martin, Maria, Schiechl, Gabriela, Kesselring, Rebecca, Schlitt, Hans Jürgen, Geissler, Edward K, Fichtner-Feigl, Stefan
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Background and aimsColitis-associated tumorigenesis is a balance between proliferation of tumour cells and tumour immunosurveillance. The role of T-helper-cell-derived cytokines in tumour growth is not fully understood. In this study the authors investigated the influence of interleukin (IL) 21 on intestinal tumorigenesis.MethodsChronic colitis was induced in IL-21−/− and littermate control wild-type mice with three cycles of 1.5% dextran sulphate sodium (DSS) over 7 days followed by 7 days of drinking water. Mice received an azoxymethane injection on day 0 of DSS-colitis to induce tumorigenesis. Immunohistochemistry was performed on inflamed and tumour-bearing areas of colons. Cytokine expression of isolated colonic CD4 T cells was determined by ELISA. Cytotoxic capacity of isolated colonic CD8 T cells targeting tumour cells was evaluated by flow cytometry and quantitative cytotoxicity assay. Apoptosis of tumour cells was determined by TUNEL assay of colonic sections.ResultsIncreasing expression of IL-21 was observed in chronic colitis, which showed functional importance, since IL-21 deficiency prevented chronic DSS-colitis development. Further, in the absence of IL-21, significantly fewer tumour nodules were detected, despite a similar extent of intestinal inflammation. In wild-type mice, 8.6±1.9 tumour nodules were found compared with 1.0±1.2 in IL-21-deficient mice. In tumour-bearing IL-21-deficient mice, intestinal inflammation was restored and partly dependent on interferon (IFN)-γ, whereas the inflammation in wild-type mice showed high IL-17A concentrations. In these rare tumours in IL-21-deficient mice, tumour cell proliferation (Ki-67) was decreased, while cell apoptosis was increased, compared with wild-type mice. Increased IFNγ expression in tumour-bearing IL-21-deficient mice led to increased tumour immunosurveillance mediated by cytotoxic CD8CD103 T cells targeting E-cadherin+ colonic tumour cells and therefore limited tumour growth.ConclusionThese results indicate that IL-21 orchestrates colitis-associated tumorigenesis, leading to the hypothesis that high IFNγ and low IL-17A expression reduces tumour cell proliferation and increases tumour immunosurveillance.
ISSN:0017-5749
1468-3288
DOI:10.1136/gutjnl-2011-300612