Abstract
Aim: To investigate the clinical significance of Tim-3 (T-cell immunoglobulin- and mucin-domain-containing molecule 3) expression in natural killer (NK) cells from patients with gastric cancer.
Materials and methods: Sixty-two patients with gastric cancer and 32 healthy controls were recruited for this study. Tim-3 expression in peripheral blood samples was analyzed using flow cytometry. The expression pattern of Tim-3 on NK cells was also confirmed using a gastric cancer-bearing mouse model. To further investigate the mechanisms that regulate Tim-3 expression, T-bet−/−, Eomes−/−, and Eomes/T-bet double knockout mice were utilized. Additionally, we statistically analyzed the clinical significance of Tim-3 expression on NK cells.
Results: We found that the levels of Tim-3 in NK cells obtained from patients with gastric cancer were significantly higher than the levels in healthy controls. Clinical analyses showed that Tim-3 levels on NK cells were associated with advanced tumor stage. In a tumor-bearing mouse model, Tim-3 levels in NK cells increased with tumor growth, indicating that tumor progression could induce Tim-3 expression in NK cells. Finally, we report that T-bet is a key factor involved in regulating Tim-3 expression.
Conclusion: Our data indicate that Tim-3 expression on NK cells is regulated by T-bet, and that Tim-3 levels correlate with advanced stages of gastric cancer.
DECLARATION OF INTEREST
This work was supported in part by the National Natural Science Foundation of China (NO81272737 and NO31170866).
The authors have declared no financial interests.