4. Targeting Wnt Signaling as a Novel Therapeutic Option
There are numerous relationships between Wnt signaling, immune function, and cancer progression; most notable is that of increased Wnt signaling correlating with decreased tumor T cell infiltration, as discussed above. Wnt pathways have a vast number of roles that offer multiple options for pathway modulation in the malignant setting. The United States Patent and Trade Office Patent and Patent Application databases report 103 unique Wnt signaling modulators being investigated, with 34 in clinic trials [
]. Actions of these therapies range from the signal pathway component targeting activators to Wnt inhibitors. Many intriguing investigations are evaluating tumor immunity with drug intervention. Understanding the immunomodulation of these therapies will be essential during attempts to transition the TME to a less resistant milieu.
Numerous studies are currently combining Wnt therapies with ICIs, additional Wnt inhibitors, or chemotherapies in an attempt to achieve optimal effects on tumor control. However, it is currently unknown how the combination of therapies will affect tumor progression. In colon cancer, changes in Wnt signaling pathways have shown counter-intuitive results in some studies, such as WNT-TCF blockade actually boosting metastasis [
]. In contrast, other results have suggested a synergy between Wnt pathway inhibition and ICIs, for example when used as a combinatorial therapy in a mouse melanoma model [
]. Additional combination treatments with multiple Wnt inhibitors have been found to revert resistance and repress tumor growth in colorectal cancer [
]. Furthermore, the combination of Wnt antagonists with taxane therapies elicited a synergistic effect by sensitizing cancer stem cells to taxane-induced death [
].
identifies clinical trials of Wnt modulators, with the listed agent, mechanism of action, intervention strategy, and targeted disease.
Therapeutic modulation of Wnt signaling is being investigated through many avenues, several of which are depicted in
. One agent under investigation is DKN-01. This is a monoclonal antibody to DKK1, the Wnt/β-catenin inhibitor. DKN-01 is being used in several clinical trials for investigation of safety and efficacy in patients with multiple primary tumor types. There have been two completed clinical trials with this drug in multiple myeloma (NCT01711671, NCT01457417). Results are available from one of these studies, but published conclusions are pending [
]. High serum levels of DKK1 were found in patients with pancreas, stomach, liver, bile duct, breast, and cervical cancers [
]. Prior studies have also shown that increased DKK1 stabilized MDSC populations, leading to suppression of the T cell intratumoral response [
]. The direct influence on Wnt signaling from these agents is convoluted given it is a result of inhibition of a Wnt inhibitor. If this inhibitor is blocking canonical Wnt signaling, it may lead to an upregulation of noncanonical signaling. Perhaps with inhibition of DKK1, the alternative pathway will be normalized. There may also be a decrease in intratumoral suppressive MDSCs, resulting in increased tumor cell recognition and clearance by CD8
+
T cells. It will be interesting to view future clinical trial results related to effects on the TME that occur following targeted inhibition of a Wnt inhibitor, with and without combination therapy.
Alternative therapeutic agents act directly on Wnt ligand secretion. PORCN inhibitors are known to block the extracellular excretion of Wnt by blocking the enzyme responsible for palmitoylation of Wnt ligands (
). This family of inhibitors includes C59, CGX 1321, ETC1922159, LGK974, IWP-L6, and RXC004. With this overall extracellular decrease in Wnt ligands, the TME may have the ability to convert to a T cell-inflamed environment, based on evidence of increased Wnt signaling correlated with T cell-noninflamed tumors [
]. Many of these molecules remain under investigation in the preclinical setting; however, some studies have advanced to clinical trials. Pending results will provide insight into treatment efficacy for multiple malignancies.
Some Wnt altering agents have been previously approved in nonmalignant diseases. Artesunate is a compound extracted from the herb
Artemisia annua
, used as an FDA-approved antimalarial drug. Treatment of colorectal tumor xenografts with this agent correlated with decreased growth of tumors with inhibition of a hyperactive Wnt/β-catenin pathway [
]. The exact mechanism of the agent remains unknown. However, two phase 1 trials are now completed using this agent in subjects with hepatocellular carcinoma or solid tumors. Results are pending from these dose-escalation studies (NCT02304289, NCT02353026). An additional completed phase 1 study evaluated artesunate as an add-on therapy in subjects with metastatic or locally advanced breast cancer, with unreleased results (NCT00764036). Additionally, niclosamide is an anti-helminthic agent that has been identified to have many molecular targets, including inhibition of the Wnt pathway. Specifically, the Axin-GSK3β interaction is targeted in this pathway, resulting in a suppression of Wnt/Snail [
]. There are several phase 1 trials involving this therapeutic agent in various cancers. One trial involving several types of prostate cancer has been completed, with pending results (NCT02532114). One note of caution is that with so many known targets, it may be hard to determine if the effects of these therapies are directly related to Wnt changes in the tumor, as opposed to additional mechanistic alterations.
Additional Wnt-inhibiting agents are being tested in clinical trials. Ipafricept, also known as OMP54F28, is a recombinant fusion protein with an extracellular Fzd 8 receptor portion attached to an IgG1 Fc fragment, which acts as a decoy receptor for Wnt ligands [
]. Four phase 1 trials have been completed with this therapy (NCT02069145, NCT02092363, NCT02050178, NCT01608867). Study conclusions have not been released. WNT5A is a Wnt ligand mimicked by Foxy-5, a formylated 6 amino acid peptide fragment. The agent is thought to impair migration of epithelial cancer cells, giving it anti-metastatic potential [
]. Two clinical trials have been completed to determine appropriate doses for phase 2 trials (NCT02020291, NCT02655952). Due to increased β-catenin levels found in many colon cancers, a CREB-binding protein (CBP)/catenin inhibitor, PRI724, is being investigated [
111]. Two phase 1 clinical trials have been completed with the use of this inhibitor in pancreatic cancers and acute and chronic myeloid leukemias (NCT01764477, NCT01606579). Results from these clinical trials are currently unavailable. SM08502 is an orally bioavailable small molecule inhibitor that is thought to inhibit the expression of Wnt signaling pathway genes, but further investigation is being elucidated on the exact mechanisms of action and its relation to Wnt. One phase 1 clinical trial is using this agent in solid tumors (NCT03355066). Completion of these studies, and future studies, may provide insight into the optimal dose and timing for administration of Wnt-based therapeutics and malignancies that are most sensitive to these agents.
References
- Wang, B.; Tian, T.; Kalland, K.-H.; Ke, X.; Qu, Y. Targeting Wnt/β-Catenin Signaling for Cancer Immunotherapy. Trends Pharmacol. Sci. 2018, 39, 648–658.
- Galluzzi, L.; Spranger, S.; Fuchs, E.; López-Soto, A. WNT Signaling in Cancer Immunosurveillance. Trends Cell Biol. 2019, 29, 44–65.
- Mora, J.; Mertens, C.; Meier, J.K.; Fuhrmann, D.C.; Brüne, B.; Jung, M. Strategies to Interfere with Tumor Metabolism through the Interplay of Innate and Adaptive Immunity. Cells 2019, 8, 8.
- Sherwood, V. Wnt signaling: An emerging mediator of cancer cell metabolism? Cell. Biol. 2015, 35, 2–10.
- Roel Nusse, H.C. Wnt/b-catenin signaling, disease, and emerging therapeutic modalities. Cell 2017, 169, 985–999.
- Nusse, R.; Varmus, H.E. Many tumors induced by the mouse mammary tumor virus contain a provirus integrated in the same region of the host genome. Cell 1982, 31, 99–109.
- Kusserow, A.; Sturm, C.; Hrouda, M.; Lentfer, J.; Schmidt, H.A.; Technau, U.; von Haeseler, A.; Hobmayer, B.; Martindale, M.Q.; Holstein, T.W. Unexpected complexity of the wnt gene familly in a sea anemone. Nature 2005, 433, 156–160.
- Niehrs, C.; Acebron, S.P. Mitotic and mitogenic Wnt signalling. EMBO J. 2012, 31, 2705–2713.
- Rios-Esteves, J.; Resh, M.D. Stearoyl CoA desaturase is required to produce active, lipid-modified Wnt proteins. Cell Rep. 2013, 4, 1072–1081.
- Janda, C.Y.; Waghray, D.; Levin, A.M.; Thomas, C.; Garcia, K.C. Structural basis of Wnt recognition by Frizzled. Science 2012, 337, 59–64.
- Bartscherer, K.; Pelte, N.; Ingelfinger, D.; Boutros, M. Secretion of Wnt Ligands Requires Evi, a Conserved Transmembrane Protein. Cell 2006, 125, 523–533.
- Gross, J.C.; Chaudhary, V.; Bartscherer, K.; Boutros, M. Active Wnt proteins are secreted on exosomes. Nature 2012, 14, 1036–1045.
- Alok, A.; Lei, Z.; Jagannathan, N.S.; Kaur, S.; Harmston, N.; Rozen, S.G.; Tucker-Kellogg, L.; Virshup, D.M. Wnt proteins synergize to activate b-catenin signaling. Cell Sci. 2017, 130, 1532–1544.
- Janda, C.Y.; Dang, L.T.; You, C.; Chang, J.; de Lau, W.; Zhong, Z.A.; Yan, K.S.; Marecic, O.; Siepe, D.; Li, X.; et al. Surrogate wnt agonists that phenocopy canonical wnt and b-catenin signaling. Nature 2017, 545, 234–237.
- Aberle, H.; Bauer, A.; Stappert, J.; Kispert, A.; Kemler, R. beta-catenin is a target for the ubiquitin-proteasome pathway. EMBO J. 1997, 16, 3797–3804.
- Kitagawa, M.; Hatakeyama, S.; Shirane, M.; Matsumoto, M.; Ishida, N.; Hattori, K.; Nakamichi, I.; Kikuchi, A.; Nakayama, K.; Nakayama, K.-I.; et al. An F-box protein, FWD1, mediates ubiquitin-dependent proteolysis of beta-catenin. EMBO J. 1999, 18, 2401–2410.
- Stamos, J.L.; Enos, M.D.; Shah, N.; Weis, W.I. Structural basis of gsk-3 inhibition by n-terminal phosphorylation and by the wnt receptor lrp6. eLife 2014, 3, e01998.
- Behrens, J.; Kuhl, M.; Bruhn, L.; Wedlich, D.; Grosschedl, R.; Birchmeier, W. Functional interaction of beta-catenin with the transcription factor lef-1. Nature 1996, 382, 638–642.
- Molenaar, M.; Van De Wetering, M.; Oosterwegel, M.; Peterson-Maduro, J.; Godsave, S.; Korinek, V.; Roose, J.; Destrée, O.; Clevers, H. XTcf-3 transcription factor mediates beta-catenin-induced axis formation in Xenopus embryos. Cell 1996, 86, 391–399.
- Lustig, B.; Jerchow, B.; Sachs, M.; Weiler, S.; Pietsch, T.; Karsten, U.; Van De Wetering, M.; Clevers, H.; Schlag, P.M.; Birchmeier, W.; et al. Negative Feedback Loop of Wnt Signaling through Upregulation of Conductin/Axin2 in Colorectal and Liver Tumors. Cell. Biol. 2002, 22, 1184–1193.
- De, A. Wnt/ca2+ signaling pathway: A brief overview. Acta Biochim. Biophys. Sin. 2011, 43, 745–756.
- Bryja, V.; Andersson, E.R.; Schambony, A.; Esner, M.; Bryjová, L.; Biris, K.K.; Hall, A.C.; Kraft, B.; Cajanek, L.; Yamaguchi, T.P.; et al. The Extracellular Domain of Lrp5/6 Inhibits Noncanonical Wnt Signaling In Vivo. Biol. Cell 2009, 20, 924–936.
- Stolz, A.; Neufeld, K.; Ertych, N.; Bastians, H. Wnt-mediated protein stabilization ensures proper mitotic microtubule assembly and chromosome segregation. EMBO Rep. 2015, 16, 490–499.
- Cruciat, C.M. Secreted and transmembrane wnt inhibitors and activators. Cold Spring Harb. Perspect. Biol. 2013, 5, a015081.
- Kagey, M.H.; He, X. Rationale for targeting the Wnt signalling modulator Dickkopf‐1 for oncology. J. Pharmacol. 2017, 174, 4637–4650.
- Xiao, Q.; Wang, W.; Chen, S.; Zheng, Y.; Yu, X.; Meeth, K.; Sahraei, M.; Bothwell, A.L.M.; Chen, L.; Bosenberg, M.; et al. Dkk2 imparts tumor immunity evasion through β-catenin-independent suppression of cytotoxic immune-cell activation. Med. 2018, 24, 262–270.
- Hao, H.-X.; Xie, Y.; Zhang, Y.; Charlat, O.; Oster, E.; Avello, M.; Lei, H.; Mickanin, C.; Liu, D.; Ruffner, H.; et al. ZNRF3 promotes Wnt receptor turnover in an R-spondin-sensitive manner. Nature 2012, 485, 195–200.
- Koo, B.-K.; Spit, M.; Jordens, I.; Low, T.Y.; Stange, D.E.; Van De Wetering, M.; Van Es, J.H.; Mohammed, S.; Heck, A.J.R.; Maurice, M.M.; et al. Tumour suppressor RNF43 is a stem-cell E3 ligase that induces endocytosis of Wnt receptors. Nature 2012, 488, 665–669.
- Moffat, L.L.; Robinson, R.E.; Bakoulis, A.; Clark, S.G. The conserved transmembrane RING finger protein PLR-1 downregulates Wnt signaling by reducing Frizzled, Ror and Ryk cell-surface levels in elegans. Development 2014, 141, 617–628.
- Korinek, V.; Barker, N.; Moerer, P.; Van Donselaar, E.; Huls, G.; Peters, P.J.; Clevers, H. Depletion of epithelial stem-cell compartments in the small intestine of mice lacking Tcf-4. Genet. 1998, 19, 379–383.
- Berge, D.T.; Kurek, D.; Blauwkamp, T.; Koole, W.; Maas, A.; Eroglu, E.; Siu, R.K.; Nusse, R. Embryonic stem cells require Wnt proteins to prevent differentiation to epiblast stem cells. Nature 2011, 13, 1070–1075.
- Andl, T.; Reddy, S.T.; Gaddapara, T.; E Millar, S. WNT signals are required for the initiation of hair follicle development. F1000 Post-Publ. Peer Rev. Biomed. Lit. 2002, 2, 643–653.
- Miao, Y.; Yang, H.; Levorse, J.; Yuan, S.; Polak, L.; Sribour, M.; Singh, B.; Rosenblum, M.D.; Fuchs, E. Adaptive Immune Resistance Emerges from Tumor-Initiating Stem Cells. Cell 2019, 177, 1172–1186.e14.
- Hu, B.; Wang, Q.; Wang, Y.A.; Hua, S.; Sauvé, C.-E.G.; Ong, D.; Lan, Z.D.; Chang, Q.; Ho, Y.W.; Monasterio, M.M.; et al. Epigenetic Activation of WNT5A Drives Glioblastoma Stem Cell Differentiation and Invasive Growth. Cell 2016, 167, 1281–1295.e18.
- Gujral, T.S.; Chan, M.; Peshkin, L.; Sorger, P.K.; Kirschner, M.W.; MacBeath, G. A noncanonical Frizzled2 pathway regulates epithelial-mesenchymal transition and metastasis. Cell 2014, 159, 844–856.
- Zeng, Y.A.; Nusse, R. Wnt Proteins Are Self-Renewal Factors for Mammary Stem Cells and Promote Their Long-Term Expansion in Culture. Cell Stem Cell 2010, 6, 568–577.
- Castagnoli, L.; Cancila, V.; Cordoba-Romero, S.L.; Faraci, S.; Talarico, G.; Belmonte, B.; Iorio, M.V.; Milani, M.; Volpari, T.; Chiodoni, C.; et al. WNT signaling modulates PD-L1 expression in the stem cell compartment of triple-negative breast cancer. Oncogene 2019, 38, 4047–4060.
- Hou, Y.C.; Hsieh, M.H.; Tung, H.L.; Wang, H.C.; Shan, Y.S. Low cd8⁺ t cell infiltration and high pd-l1 expression are associated with level of cd44⁺/cd133⁺ cancer stem cells and predict an unfavorable prognosis in pancreatic cancer. Cancers (Basel) 2019, 11, E541.
- Willert, K.; Danenberg, E.; Duncan, A.W.; Weissman, I.L.; Reya, T.; Yates, J.R., 3rd; Nusse, R. Wnt proteins are lipid-modified and can act as stem cell growth factors. Nature 2003, 423, 448–452.
- Sugimura, R.; He, X.C.; Venkatraman, A.; Arai, F.; Box, A.; Semerad, C.; Haug, J.S.; Peng, L.; Zhong, X.-B.; Suda, T.; et al. Noncanonical Wnt Signaling Maintains Hematopoietic Stem Cells in the Niche. Cell 2012, 150, 351–365.
- Nemeth, M.J.; Topol, L.; Anderson, S.M.; Yang, Y.; Bodine, D.M. Wnt5a inhibits canonical wnt signaling in hematopoietic stem cells and enhances repopulation. Natl. Acad. Sci. USA 2007, 104, 15436–15441.
- Cobas, M.; Wilson, A.; Ernst, B.; Mancini, S.J.; MacDonald, H.R.; Kemler, R.; Radtke, F. Beta-catenin is dispensable for hematopoiesis and lymphopoiesis. Exp. Med. 2004, 199, 221–229.
- Jeannet, G.; Scheller, M.; Scarpellino, L.; Duboux, S.; Gardiol, N.; Back, J.; Kuttler, F.; Malanchi, I.; Birchmeier, W.; Leutz, A.; et al. Long-term, multilineage hematopoiesis occurs in the combined absence of beta-catenin and gamma-catenin. Blood 2008, 111, 142–149.
- Gattinoni, L.; Zhong, X.S.; Palmer, D.C.; Ji, Y.; Hinrichs, C.S.; Yu, Z.; Wrzesinski, C.; Boni, A.; Cassard, L.; Garvin, L.M.; et al. Wnt signaling arrests effector t cell differentiation and generates cd8+ memory stem cells. Med. 2009, 15, 808–813.
- Rijsewijk, F.; Van Deemter, L.; Wagenaar, E.; Sonnenberg, A.; Nusse, R. Transfection of the int-1 mammary oncogene in cuboidal RAC mammary cell line results in morphological transformation and tumorigenicity. EMBO J. 1987, 6, 127–131.
- Kinzler, K.W. Lessions from hereditary colorectal cancer. Cell 1996, 87, 159–170.
- Nishisho, I.; Nakamura, Y.; Miyoshi, Y.; Miki, Y.; Ando, H.; Horii, A.; Koyama, K.; Utsunomiya, J.; Baba, S.; Hedge, P. Mutations of chromosome 5q21 genes in FAP and colorectal cancer patients. Science 1991, 253, 665–669.
- Yaeger, R.; Chatila, W.K.; Lipsyc, M.D.; Hechtman, J.F.; Cercek, A.; Sánchez-Vega, F.; Jayakumaran, G.; Middha, S.; Zehir, A.; Donoghue, M.T.; et al. Clinical sequencing defines the genomic landscape of metastatic colorectal cancer. Cancer Cell 2018, 33, 125–136.e3.
- Liu, W.; Mai, M.; Seelan, R.S.; Taniguchi, K.; Krishnadath, K.K.; Halling, K.C.; Cunningham, J.M.; Boardman, L.A.; Qian, C.; Christensen, E.; et al. Mutations in axin2 cause colorectal cancer with defective mismatch repair by activating beta-catenin/tcf signalling. Genet. 2000, 26, 146–147.
- Satoh, S.; Daigo, Y.; Furukawa, Y.; Kato, T.; Miwa, N.; Nishiwaki, T.; Kawasoe, T.; Ishiguro, H.; Fujita, M.; Tokino, T.; et al. AXIN1 mutations in hepatocellular carcinomas, and growth suppression in cancer cells by virus-mediated transfer of AXIN1. Genet. 2000, 24, 245–250.
- Guezguez, B.; Almakadi, M.; Benoit, Y.D.; Shapovalova, Z.; Rahmig, S.; Fiebig-Comyn, A.; Casado, F.L.; Tanasijevic, B.; Bresolin, S.; Masetti, R.; et al. GSK3 Deficiencies in Hematopoietic Stem Cells Initiate Pre-neoplastic State that Is Predictive of Clinical Outcomes of Human Acute Leukemia. Cancer Cell 2016, 29, 61–74.
- Morin, P.J. Activation of beta-Catenin-Tcf Signaling in Colon Cancer by Mutations in beta-Catenin or APC. Science 1997, 275, 1787–1790.
- Rubinfeld, B.; Robbins, P.; El-Gamil, M.; Albert, I.; Porfiri, E.; Polakis, P. Stabilization of beta-Catenin by Genetic Defects in Melanoma Cell Lines. Science 1997, 275, 1790–1792.
- Bodnar, L.; Cierniak, S.; Smoter, M.; Cichowicz, M.; Kozlowski, W.; Szczylik, C.; Wieczorek, M.; Laparska-Przybysz, M. Wnt/b-catenin pathway as a potential prognostic and predictive marker in patients with advanced ovarian cancer. Ovarian Res. 2014, 7, 16.
- Wu, J.; Molin, M.D.; Maitra, A.; de Wilde, R.F.; Wood, L.D.; Eshleman, J.R.; Goggins, M.G.; Wolfgang, C.L.; Canto, M.I.; Schulick, R.D.; et al. Whole-exome sequencing of neoplastic cysts of the pancreas reveals recurrrent mutations in components of ubiquitin-dependent pathways. Natl. Acad. Sci. USA 2011, 108, 21188–21193.
- Assie, G.; Letouzé, E.; Fassnacht, M.; Jouinot, A.; Luscap, W.; Barreau, O.; Omeiri, H.; Rodriguez, S.; Perlemoine, K.; Rene-Corail, F.; et al. Integrated genomic characterization of adrenocortical carcinoma. Genet. 2014, 46, 607–612.
- Schreiber, R.D.; Old, L.J.; Smyth, M.J. Cancer Immunoediting: Integrating Immunity’s Roles in Cancer Suppression and Promotion. Science 2011, 331, 1565–1570.
- Maartje, C.A.; Wouters, F.L.K.; Workel, H.H.; Klip, H.G.; Plat, A.; Kooi, N.M.; Wisman, G.B.A.; Mourits, M.J.E.; Arts, H.J.G.; Oonk, M.H.M.; et al. Treatment regimen, surgical outcome, and t-cell differentiation influence prognostic benefit of tumor-infiltrating lymphocytes in high-grade serous ovarian cancer. Cancer Res. 2016, 22, 714–724.
- Ruan, M.; Tian, T.; Rao, J.; Xu, X.; Yu, B.; Yang, W.; Shui, R. Predictive value of tumor-infiltrating lymphocytes to pathological complete response in neoadjuvant treated triple-negative breast cancers. Pathol. 2018, 13, 66.
- Xiang, P.; Yang, Y.; Sheng, J.; He, Q.; Song, Y.; Yu, W.; Hu, S.; Jin, J. Infiltrating cd4+ t cells attenuate chemotherapy sensitivity in prostate cancer via ccl5 signaling. Prostate 2019, 79, 1018–1031.
- Sato, E.; Olson, S.H.; Ahn, J.; Bundy, B.; Nishikawa, H.; Qian, F.; Jungbluth, A.A.; Frosina, D.; Gnjatic, S.; Ambrosone, C.; et al. Intraepithelial cd8+ tumor-infiltrating lymphocytes and a high cd8+/regulatory t cell ratio are associated with favorable prognosis in ovarian cancer. Natl. Acad. Sci. USA 2005, 102, 18538–18543.
- Thorsson, V.; Brown, S.D.; Wolf, D.; Bortone, D.S.; Yang, T.H.O.; Porta-Pardo, E.; Gao, G.F.; Plaisier, C.L.; Eddy, J.A.; Ziv, E.; et al. The immune landscape of cancer. Immunity 2018, 48, 812–830.
- Xing, S.; Li, F.; Zeng, Z.; Zhao, Y.; Yu, S.; Shan, Q.; Li, Y.; Phillips, F.C.; Maina, P.K.; Qi, H.H.; et al. Tcf1 and lef1 transcription factors establish cd8(+) t cell identity through intrinsic hdac activity. Immunol. 2016, 17, 695–703.
- Steinke, F.C.; Yu, S.; Zhou, X.; He, B.; Yang, W.; Zhou, B.; Kawamoto, H.; Zhu, J.; Tan, K.; Xue, H.H. Tcf-1 and lef-1 act upstream of th-pok to promote the cd4(+) t cell fate and interact with runx3 to silence cd4 in cd8(+) t cells. Immunol. 2014, 15, 646–656.
- Staal, F.J.T.; Luis, T.C.; Tiemessen, M.M. WNT signalling in the immune system: WNT is spreading its wings. Rev. Immunol. 2008, 8, 581–593.
- Xu, Y.; Banerjee, D.; Huelsken, J.; Birchmeier, W.; Sen, J.M. Deletion of beta-catenin impairs t cell development. Immunol. 2003, 4, 1177–1182.
- Jeannet, G.; Boudousquié, C.; Gardiol, N.; Kang, J.; Huelsken, J.; Held, W. Essential role of the Wnt pathway effector Tcf-1 for the establishment of functional CD8 T cell memory. Natl. Acad. Sci. USA 2010, 107, 9777–9782.
- Zhao, D.M.; Yu, S.; Zhou, X.; Haring, J.S.; Held, W.; Badovinac, V.P.; Harty, J.T.; Xue, H.H. Constitutive activation of wnt signaling favors generation of memory cd8 t cells. Immunol. 2010, 184, 1191–1199.
- Yang, Y.; Mlodzik, M. Wnt-Frizzled/Planar Cell Polarity Signaling: Cellular Orientation by Facing the Wind (Wnt). Rev. Cell Dev. Biol. 2015, 31, 623–646.
- Jeevan-Raj, B.; Gehrig, J.; Charmoy, M.; Chennupati, V.; Grandclément, C.; Angelino, P.; Delorenzi, M.; Held, W. The Transcription Factor Tcf1 Contributes to Normal NK Cell Development and Function by Limiting the Expression of Granzymes. Cell Rep. 2017, 20, 613–626.
- Ranheim, E.A.; Kwan, H.C.K.; Wang, Y.-K.; Reya, T.; Weissman, I.L.; Francke, U. Frizzled 9 knock-out mice have abnormal B-cell development. Blood 2005, 105, 2487–2494.
- Yu, Q.; Quinn, W.J., 3rd; Salay, T.; Crowley, J.E.; Cancro, M.P.; Sen, J.M. Role of beta-catenin in b cell development and function. Immunol. 2008, 181, 3777–3783.
- Zhou, J.; Cheng, P.; Youn, J.-I.; Cotter, M.J.; Gabrilovich, D.I. Notch and Wingless Signaling Cooperate in Regulation of Dendritic Cell Differentiation. Immunology 2009, 30, 845–859.
- Sato, N.; Yamabuki, T.; Takano, A.; Koinuma, J.; Aragaki, M.; Masuda, K.; Ishikawa, N.; Kohno, N.; Ito, H.; Miyamoto, M.; et al. Wnt Inhibitor Dickkopf-1 as a Target for Passive Cancer Immunotherapy. Cancer Res. 2010, 70, 5326–5336.
- Kimura, H.; Fumoto, K.; Shojima, K.; Nojima, S.; Osugi, Y.; Tomihara, H.; Eguchi, H.; Shintani, Y.; Endo, H.; Inoue, M.; et al. CKAP4 is a Dickkopf1 receptor and is involved in tumor progression. Clin. Investig. 2016, 126, 2689–2705.
- D’Amico, L.; Mahajan, S.; Capietto, A.-H.; Yang, Z.; Zamani, A.; Ricci, B.; Bumpass, D.B.; Meyer, M.; Su, X.; Wang-Gillam, A.; et al. Dickkopf-related protein 1 (Dkk1) regulates the accumulation and function of myeloid derived suppressor cells in cancer. Exp. Med. 2016, 213, 827–840.
- Qian, J.; Zheng, Y.; Zheng, C.; Wang, L.; Qin, H.; Hong, S.; Li, H.; Lu, Y.; He, J.; Yang, J.; et al. Active vaccination with dickkopf-1 induces protective and therapeutic antitumor immunity in murine multiple myeloma. Blood 2012, 119, 161–169.
- Valencia, J.; Hidalgo, L.; Hernandez-Lopez, C.; Canseco, N.M.; Vicente, A.; Varas, A.; Sacedon, R. Wnt5a signaling increases il-12 secretion by human dendritic cells and enhances ifn-gamma production by cd4+ t cells. Lett. 2014, 162, 188–199.
- Sato, A.; Kayama, H.; Shojima, K.; Matsumoto, S.; Koyama, H.; Minami, Y.; Nojima, S.; Morii, E.; Honda, H.; Takeda, K.; et al. The wnt5a-ror2 axis promotes the signaling circuit between interleukin-12 and interferon-gamma in colitis. Rep. 2015, 5, 10536.
- Keerthivasan, S.; Aghajani, K.; Dose, M.; Molinero, L.; Khan, M.W.; Venkateswaran, V.; Weber, C.; Emmanuel, A.O.; Sun, T.; Bentrem, D.J.; et al. Beta-catenin promotes colitis and colon cancer through imprinting of proinflammatory properties in t cells. Transl. Med. 2014, 6, 225ra228.
- Ding, Y.; Shen, S.; Lino, A.C.; Lafaille, M.A.C.D.; Lafaille, J.J. Beta-catenin stabilization extends regulatory T cell survival and induces anergy in nonregulatory T cells. Med. 2008, 14, 162–169.
- Hong, Y.; Manoharan, I.; Suryawanshi, A.; Majumdar, T.; Angus-Hill, M.L.; Koni, P.A.; Manicassamy, B.; Mellor, A.L.; Munn, D.H.; Manicassamy, S. Beta-catenin promotes regulatory t-cell responses in tumors by inducing vitamin a metabolism in dendritic cells. Cancer 2015, 75, 656–665.
- Hong, Y.; Manoharan, I.; Suryawanshi, A.; Shanmugam, A.; Swafford, D.; Ahmad, S.; Chinnadurai, R.; Manicassamy, B.; He, Y.; Mellor, A.L.; et al. Deletion of lrp5 and lrp6 in dendritic cells enhances antitumor immunity. Oncoimmunology 2016, 5, e1115941.
- Baur, A.S.; Lutz, M.B.; Schierer, S.; Beltrame, L.; Theiner, G.; Zinser, E.; Ostalecki, C.; Heidkamp, G.; Haendle, I.; Erdmann, M.; et al. Denileukin diftitox (ONTAK) induces a tolerogenic phenotype in dendritic cells and stimulates survival of resting Treg. Blood 2013, 122, 2185–2194.
- Yaguchi, T.; Goto, Y.; Kido, K.; Mochimaru, H.; Sakurai, T.; Tsukamoto, N.; Kudo-Saito, C.; Fujita, T.; Sumimoto, H.; Kawakami, Y. Immune suppression and resistance mediated by constitutive activation of wnt/beta-catenin signaling in human melanoma cells. Immunol. 2012, 189, 2110–2117.
- Fu, C.; Liang, X.; Cui, W.; Ober-Blobaum, J.L.; Vazzana, J.; Shrikant, P.A.; Lee, K.P.; Clausen, B.E.; Mellman, I.; Jiang, A. Beta-catenin in dendritic cells exerts opposite functions in cross-priming and maintenance of cd8+ t cells through regulation of il-10. Natl. Acad. Sci. USA 2015, 112, 2823–2828.
- Luke, J.J.; Bao, R.; Sweis, R.F.; Spranger, S.; Gajewski, T.F. Wnt/beta-catenin pathway activation correlates with immune exclusion across human cancers. Cancer Res. 2019, doi:10.1158/1078-0432.CCR-18-1942.
- Spranger, S.; Bao, R.; Gajewski, T.F. Melanoma-intrinsic beta-catenin signalling prevents anti-tumour immunity. Nature 2015, 523, 231–235.
- Nsengimana, J.; Laye, J.; Filia, A.; O’Shea, S.; Muralidhar, S.; Pozniak, J.; Droop, A.; Chan, M.; Walker, C.; Parkinson, L.; et al. Beta-catenin-mediated immune evasion pathway frequently operates in primary cutaneous melanomas. Clin. Investig. 2018, 128, 2048–2063.
- Massi, D.; Romano, E.; Rulli, E.; Merelli, B.; Nassini, R.; De Logu, F.; Bieche, I.; Baroni, G.; Cattaneo, L.; Xue, G.; et al. Baseline beta-catenin, programmed death-ligand 1 expression and tumour-infiltrating lymphocytes predict response and poor prognosis in braf inhibitor-treated melanoma patients. J. Cancer 2017, 78, 70–81.
- Taylor, A.; Rothstein, D.; Rudd, C.E. Small-molecule inhibition of pd-1 transcription is an effective alternative to antibody blockade in cancer therapy. Cancer Res. 2018, 78, 706–717.
- Li, C.-W.; Lim, S.-O.; Xia, W.; Lee, H.-H.; Chan, L.-C.; Kuo, C.-W.; Khoo, K.-H.; Chang, S.-S.; Cha, J.-H.; Kim, T.; et al. Glycosylation and stabilization of programmed death ligand-1 suppresses T-cell activity. Commun. 2016, 7, 12632.
- Simsek, M.; Bilici, M. Immunological agents used in cancer treatment. Eurasian J. Med. 2019, 1, 90–94.
- Hoos, A. Development of immuno-oncology drugs—From CTLA4 to PD1 to the next generations. Rev. Drug Discov. 2016, 15, 235–247.
- Cortés, J.; André, F.; Gonçalves, A.; Kümmel, S.; Martín, M.; Schmid, P.; Schuetz, F.; Swain, S.M.; Easton, V.; Pollex, E.; et al. IMpassion132 Phase III trial: Atezolizumab and chemotherapy in early relapsing metastatic triple-negative breast cancer. Oncol. 2019, doi:10.2217/fon-2019-0059.
- Wang, C.; Kulkarni, P.; Salgia, R. Combined Checkpoint Inhibition and Chemotherapy: New Era of 1st-Line Treatment for Non-Small-Cell Lung Cancer. Ther. Oncolytics 2019, 13, 1–6.
- Weiss, S.A.; Wolchok, J.D.; Sznol, M. Immunotherapy of Melanoma: Facts and Hopes. Cancer Res. 2019, doi:10.1158/1078-0432.CCR-18-1550.
- Wolchok, J.D.; Gonzalez, R.; Rutkowski, P.; Grob, J.J.; Cowey, C.L.; Lao, C.D.; Wagstaff, J.; Schadendorf, D.; Ferrucci, P.F.; Smylie, M.; et al. Overall survival with combined nivolumab and ipilimumab in advanced melanoma. Engl. J. Med. 2017, 377, 1345–1356.
- Galluzzi, L.; Yamazaki, T.; Kroemer, G. Linking cellular stress responses to systemic homeostasis. Rev. Mol. Cell Biol. 2018, 19, 731–745.
- Spranger, S.; Luke, J.J.; Bao, R.; Zha, Y.; Hernandez, K.M.; Li, Y.; Gajewski, A.P.; Andrade, J.; Gajewski, T.F. Density of immunogenic antigens does not explain the presence or absence of the T-cell–inflamed tumor microenvironment in melanoma. Natl. Acad. Sci. USA 2016, 113, E7759–E7768.
- Lu, B.; Green, B.A.; Farr, J.M.; Lopes, F.C.; Van Raay, T.J.; Lo, H.-W. Wnt Drug Discovery: Weaving Through the Screens, Patents and Clinical Trials. Cell. Basis Metastasis Road Ther. 2016, 8, 82.
- Seth, C.; Altaba, A.R. Metastases and Colon Cancer Tumor Growth Display Divergent Responses to Modulation of Canonical WNT Signaling. PLoS ONE 2016, 11, e0150697.
- Holtzhausen, A.; Zhao, F.; Evans, K.S.; Tsutsui, M.; Orabona, C.; Tyler, D.S.; Hanks, B.A. Melanoma-derived wnt5a promotes local dendritic-cell expression of ido and immunotolerance: Opportunities for pharmacologic enhancement of immunotherapy. Cancer Immunol. Res. 2015, 3, 1082–1095.
- Arqués, O.; Puig, I.; Tenbaum, S.P.; Argilés, G.; Dienstmann, R.; Fernández, N.; Caratù, G.; Matito, J.; Silberschmidt, D.; Rodon, J.; et al. Tankyrase inhibition blocks wnt/β-catenin pathway and reverts resistance to pi3k and akt inhibitors in the treatment of colorectal cancer. Cancer Res. 2016, 22, 644–656.
- Fischer, M.M.; Cancilla, B.; Yeung, V.P.; Cattaruzza, F.; Chartier, C.; Murriel, C.L.; Cain, J.; Tam, R.; Cheng, C.-Y.; Evans, J.W.; et al. WNT antagonists exhibit unique combinatorial antitumor activity with taxanes by potentiating mitotic cell death. Adv. 2017, 3, e1700090.
- S. National Library of Medicine. Clnicaltrial.Gove. Available online: https://clinicaltrials.gov/ct2/home (accessed on 30 January 2019).
- Li, L.N.; Zhang, H.D.; Yuan, S.J.; Tian, Z.Y.; Wang, L.; Sun, Z.X. Artesunate attenuates the growth of human colorectal carcinoma and inhibits hyperactive wnt/beta-catenin pathway. J. Cancer 2007, 121, 1360–1365.
- Ahn, S.Y.; Kim, N.H.; Lee, K.; Cha, Y.H.; Yang, J.H.; Cha, S.Y.; Cho, E.S.; Lee, Y.; Cha, J.S.; Cho, H.S.; et al. Niclosamide is a potential therapeutic for familial adenomatosis polyposis by disrupting Axin-GSK3 interaction. Oncotarget 2017, 8, 31842–31855.
- Jimeno, A.; Chugh, R.; Dupont, J.; Uttamsingh, S.; Kapoun, A.M.; Smith, D.C.; Messersmith, W.; Stagg, R.; Xu, L.; Brachmann, R.K.; et al. A First-in-Human Phase I Study of the Anticancer Stem Cell Agent Ipafricept (OMP-54F28), a Decoy Receptor for Wnt Ligands, in Patients with Advanced Solid Tumors. Cancer Res. 2017, 23, 7490–7497.
- Canesin, G.; Evans-Axelsson, S.; Hellsten, R.; Krzyzanowska, A.; Prasad, C.P.; Bjartell, A.; Andersson, T. Treatment with the WNT5A-mimicking peptide Foxy-5 effectively reduces the metastatic spread of WNT5A-low prostate cancer cells in an orthotopic mouse model. PLoS ONE 2017, 12, e0184418.
- Emami, K.H.; Nguyen, C.; Ma, H.; Kim, D.H.; Jeong, K.W.; Eguchi, M.; Moon, R.T.; Teo, J.L.; Kim, H.Y.; Moon, S.H.; et al. A small molecule inhibitor of beta-catenin/creb-binding protein transcription [corrected]. Natl. Acad. Sci. USA 2004, 101, 12682–12687.
]. Two phase 1 clinical trials have been completed with the use of this inhibitor in pancreatic cancers and acute and chronic myeloid leukemias (NCT01764477, NCT01606579). Results from these clinical trials are currently unavailable. SM08502 is an orally bioavailable small molecule inhibitor that is thought to inhibit the expression of Wnt signaling pathway genes, but further investigation is being elucidated on the exact mechanisms of action and its relation to Wnt. One phase 1 clinical trial is using this agent in solid tumors (NCT03355066). Completion of these studies, and future studies, may provide insight into the optimal dose and timing for administration of Wnt-based therapeutics and malignancies that are most sensitive to these agents.