The Effects of Tamoxifen on Tolerogenic Cells in Cancer.
Ros Akmal Mohd IdrisAli MussaSuhana AhmadMohammad A I Al-HatamlehRosline HassanTengku Ahmad Damitri Al Astani Bin Tengku DinWan Faiziah Wan Abdul RahmanNorhafiza Mat LazimJennifer C BoerMagdalena PlebanskiRohimah MohamudPublished in: Biology (2022)
Tamoxifen (TAM) is the most prescribed selective estrogen receptor modulator (SERM) to treat hormone-receptor-positive breast cancer patients and has been used for more than 20 years. Its role as a hormone therapy is well established; however, the potential role in modulating tolerogenic cells needs to be better clarified. Infiltrating tumor-microenvironment-regulatory T cells (TME-Tregs) are important as they serve a suppressive function through the transcription factor Forkhead box P3 (Foxp3). Abundant studies have suggested that Foxp3 regulates the expression of several genes (CTLA-4, PD-1, LAG-3, TIM-3, TIGIT, TNFR2) involved in carcinogenesis to utilize its tumor suppressor function through knockout models. TAM is indirectly concomitant via the Cre/loxP system by allowing nuclear translocation of the fusion protein, excision of the floxed STOP cassette and heritable expression of encoding fluorescent protein in a cohort of cells that express Foxp3. Moreover, TAM administration in breast cancer treatment has shown its effects directly through MDSCs by the enrichment of its leukocyte populations, such as NK and NKT cells, while it impairs the differentiation and activation of DCs. However, the fundamental mechanisms of the reduction of this pool by TAM are unknown. Here, we review the vital effects of TAM on Tregs for a precise mechanistic understanding of cancer immunotherapies.
Keyphrases
- regulatory t cells
- induced apoptosis
- transcription factor
- estrogen receptor
- cell cycle arrest
- dendritic cells
- poor prognosis
- squamous cell carcinoma
- binding protein
- gene expression
- genome wide
- long non coding rna
- quantum dots
- living cells
- positive breast cancer
- breast cancer cells
- protein protein
- childhood cancer
- genome wide identification