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Rescue of dendritic cells from glycolysis inhibition improves cancer immunotherapy in mice.

Authors :
Inamdar, Sahil
Suresh, Abhirami P.
Mangal, Joslyn L.
Ng, Nathan D.
Sundem, Alison
Wu, Christopher
Lintecum, Kelly
Thumsi, Abhirami
Khodaei, Taravat
Halim, Michelle
Appel, Nicole
Jaggarapu, Madhan Mohan Chandra Sekhar
Esrafili, Arezoo
Yaron, Jordan R.
Curtis, Marion
Acharya, Abhinav P.
Source :
Nature Communications; 9/2/2023, Vol. 14 Issue 1, p1-12, 12p
Publication Year :
2023

Abstract

Inhibition of glycolysis in immune cells and cancer cells diminishes their activity, and thus combining immunotherapies with glycolytic inhibitors is challenging. Herein, a strategy is presented where glycolysis is inhibited in cancer cells using PFK15 (inhibitor of PFKFB3, rate-limiting step in glycolysis), while simultaneously glycolysis and function is rescued in DCs by delivery of fructose-1,6-biphosphate (F16BP, one-step downstream of PFKFB3). To demonstrate the feasibility of this strategy, vaccine formulations are generated using calcium-phosphate chemistry, that incorporate F16BP, poly(IC) as adjuvant, and phosphorylated-TRP2 peptide antigen and tested in challenging and established YUMM1.1 tumours in immunocompetent female mice. Furthermore, to test the versatility of this strategy, adoptive DC therapy is developed with formulations that incorporate F16BP, poly(IC) as adjuvant and mRNA derived from B16F10 cells as antigens in established B16F10 tumours in immunocompetent female mice. F16BP vaccine formulations rescue DCs in vitro and in vivo, significantly improve the survival of mice, and generate cytotoxic T cell (Tc) responses by elevating Tc1 and Tc17 cells within the tumour. Overall, these results demonstrate that rescuing glycolysis of DCs using metabolite-based formulations can be utilized to generate immunotherapy even in the presence of glycolytic inhibitor. While glycolysis inhibition impairs cancer cell tumourigenic capacities, it also affects immune cells anti-tumour activity. Here, the authors show that rescuing glycolytic inhibition of dendritic cells improves the efficacy of combining immunotherapy with glycolysis inhibition. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
20411723
Volume :
14
Issue :
1
Database :
Complementary Index
Journal :
Nature Communications
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
171347835
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1038/s41467-023-41016-z