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Researchers find common immune system mechanism between pregnancy, cancer

9 Jul 2024
Researchers find common immune system mechanism between pregnancy, cancer

To understand why some cancers successfully circumvent the immune system to grow unchecked, researchers turned to pregnancy.

“In pregnancy, the immune system does not reject the growing fetus, so we know there must be mechanisms active in the placenta.

In cancer, it’s the same thing: the growing tumour is not rejected by the immune system.

It means the cancer cells have developed strategies to suppress immune rejection, same as in pregnancy,” said Weiping Zou, M.D., Ph.D.

It’s a good thing in pregnancy – it allows the baby to grow.

But in cancer, it means the tumour grows unchecked and treatments meant to stimulate an immune response are not effective.

To understand this overlap, Zou collaborated with other researchers from the University of Michigan Rogel Cancer Center – bringing together unique expertise in immunology, cancer genetics, gynecologic pathology and medicinal chemistry.

They found that indeed there is a molecular mechanism shared in cancer and pregnancy that suppresses the immune system.

Block this mechanism, called B7-H4, and the immune system revs up to slow cancer’s growth.

Looking at mouse models and cell lines of breast and gynecologic cancers, the researchers identified the hormone progesterone as a key regulator of the B7-H4 immune checkpoint.

The paper is published in Cell.

B7-H4 expression has previously been associated with shorter survival in cancer patients.

The Rogel researchers discovered that B7-H4 plays an active role in moderating the immune system in both the placenta and the tumour microenvironment.

Further, while the male hormone androgen has previously been linked to immune suppression in prostate cancer, this is the first time the female sex hormone progesterone has been shown to impact immune response in cancer.

Researchers used an inhibitor to block progesterone signalling in mice with breast cancer and in human breast cancer tissue samples, which did slow the cancer’s growth in mice and activated the immune response. The effect was clear but not dramatic, however.

“B7-H4 is an important checkpoint, but it’s complicated,” Zou said.

“Progesterone regulation is one mechanism, but we need more studies to understand whether other mechanisms are also involved in regulating B7-H4. We do not have a direct way to block this signalling pathway. The receptors remains unknown. There’s something in the basic immunobiology that we still don’t understand.”

Researchers plan additional studies looking at mechanisms regulating B7-H4 protein stability, as well as the role other factors plays in cancer immunology.

Source: Michigan Medicine - University of Michigan