Table 5.
Mechanisms of innate and adaptive immune interactions in the CRC tumor–stroma microenvironment.
Mechanism | Key Components | Effect | Key Details |
---|---|---|---|
The secretion of pro-inflammatory cytokines | CAFs and TAMs | Induces inflammation | CAFs and TAMs secrete IL-6 and TNF-α, which can foster chronic inflammation, paradoxically promoting tumor progression. |
The secretion of immunosuppressive factors | CAFs and TAMs | Immunosuppression | CAFs and TAMs secrete TGF-β, IL-10, and PD-L1, which inhibit T cells and promote Tregs. |
T cell exhaustion | T cells | Immunosuppression | Chronic exposure to tumor antigens and inflammatory signals can lead to a state of T cell dysfunction characterized by sustained expression of inhibitory receptors (PD-1 and CTLA-4). |
The recruitment of regulatory immune cells | MDSCs and Tregs | Immunosuppression | The tumor stroma can attract immunosuppressive cell types like MDSCs and Tregs, which suppress cytotoxic T cells and NK cells. |
Metabolic reprogramming | Tumor cells and stromal cells | Immunosuppression | Tumor cells and stromal cells can alter the metabolic landscape of the TME, creating conditions like hypoxia and nutrient deprivation that negatively impact immune cell function. |
The modulation of extracellular matrix (ECM) | CAFs | Creates a physical barrier | CAFs can remodel the ECM, creating a physical barrier that hinders immune cell infiltration and access to tumor cells. |
Cell polarization | TAMs, CD4+ T cells, MDSCs, and DCs | Immunosuppression | TAMs adopt an M2 polarization state, CD4+ T cells can be polarized into Tregs, MDSCs suppress T cell function, and DCs can become tolerogenic. |