Exploring immuno-regulatory mechanisms in the tumor microenvironment: Model and design of protocols for cancer remission.

The tumor microenvironment comprising of the immune cells and cytokines acts as the 'soil' that nourishes a developing tumor. Lack of a comprehensive study of the interactions of this tumor microenvironment with the heterogeneous sub-population of tumor cells that arise from the differenti...

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Main Authors: Piyali Ganguli, Ram Rup Sarkar
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Public Library of Science (PLoS) 2018-01-01
Series:PLoS ONE
Online Access:http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC6124765?pdf=render
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spelling doaj-9812b72ec8ac4e4281377e9188f7a6af2020-11-25T00:47:58ZengPublic Library of Science (PLoS)PLoS ONE1932-62032018-01-01139e020303010.1371/journal.pone.0203030Exploring immuno-regulatory mechanisms in the tumor microenvironment: Model and design of protocols for cancer remission.Piyali GanguliRam Rup SarkarThe tumor microenvironment comprising of the immune cells and cytokines acts as the 'soil' that nourishes a developing tumor. Lack of a comprehensive study of the interactions of this tumor microenvironment with the heterogeneous sub-population of tumor cells that arise from the differentiation of Cancer Stem Cells (CSC), i.e. the 'seed', has limited our understanding of the development of drug resistance and treatment failures in Cancer. Based on this seed and soil hypothesis, for the very first time, we have captured the concept of CSC differentiation and tumor-immune interaction into a generic model that has been validated with known experimental data. Using this model we report that as the CSC differentiation shifts from symmetric to asymmetric pattern, resistant cancer cells start accumulating in the tumor that makes it refractory to therapeutic interventions. Model analyses unveiled the presence of feedback loops that establish the dual role of M2 macrophages in regulating tumor proliferation. The study further revealed oscillations in the tumor sub-populations in the presence of TH1 derived IFN-γ that eliminates CSC; and the role of IL10 feedback in the regulation of TH1/TH2 ratio. These analyses expose important observations that are indicative of Cancer prognosis. Further, the model has been used for testing known treatment protocols to explore the reasons of failure of conventional treatment strategies and propose an improvised protocol that shows promising results in suppressing the proliferation of all the cellular sub-populations of the tumor and restoring a healthy TH1/TH2 ratio that assures better Cancer remission.http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC6124765?pdf=render
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Piyali Ganguli
Ram Rup Sarkar
spellingShingle Piyali Ganguli
Ram Rup Sarkar
Exploring immuno-regulatory mechanisms in the tumor microenvironment: Model and design of protocols for cancer remission.
PLoS ONE
author_facet Piyali Ganguli
Ram Rup Sarkar
author_sort Piyali Ganguli
title Exploring immuno-regulatory mechanisms in the tumor microenvironment: Model and design of protocols for cancer remission.
title_short Exploring immuno-regulatory mechanisms in the tumor microenvironment: Model and design of protocols for cancer remission.
title_full Exploring immuno-regulatory mechanisms in the tumor microenvironment: Model and design of protocols for cancer remission.
title_fullStr Exploring immuno-regulatory mechanisms in the tumor microenvironment: Model and design of protocols for cancer remission.
title_full_unstemmed Exploring immuno-regulatory mechanisms in the tumor microenvironment: Model and design of protocols for cancer remission.
title_sort exploring immuno-regulatory mechanisms in the tumor microenvironment: model and design of protocols for cancer remission.
publisher Public Library of Science (PLoS)
series PLoS ONE
issn 1932-6203
publishDate 2018-01-01
description The tumor microenvironment comprising of the immune cells and cytokines acts as the 'soil' that nourishes a developing tumor. Lack of a comprehensive study of the interactions of this tumor microenvironment with the heterogeneous sub-population of tumor cells that arise from the differentiation of Cancer Stem Cells (CSC), i.e. the 'seed', has limited our understanding of the development of drug resistance and treatment failures in Cancer. Based on this seed and soil hypothesis, for the very first time, we have captured the concept of CSC differentiation and tumor-immune interaction into a generic model that has been validated with known experimental data. Using this model we report that as the CSC differentiation shifts from symmetric to asymmetric pattern, resistant cancer cells start accumulating in the tumor that makes it refractory to therapeutic interventions. Model analyses unveiled the presence of feedback loops that establish the dual role of M2 macrophages in regulating tumor proliferation. The study further revealed oscillations in the tumor sub-populations in the presence of TH1 derived IFN-γ that eliminates CSC; and the role of IL10 feedback in the regulation of TH1/TH2 ratio. These analyses expose important observations that are indicative of Cancer prognosis. Further, the model has been used for testing known treatment protocols to explore the reasons of failure of conventional treatment strategies and propose an improvised protocol that shows promising results in suppressing the proliferation of all the cellular sub-populations of the tumor and restoring a healthy TH1/TH2 ratio that assures better Cancer remission.
url http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC6124765?pdf=render
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