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Tripartite antigen-agnostic combination immunotherapy cures established poorly immunogenic tumors

Authors :
Borchmann, Sven
Selenz, Carolin
Lohmann, Mia
Ludwig, Hanna
Gassa, Asmae
Braegelmann, Johannes
Lohneis, Philipp
Meder, Lydia
Mattlener, Julia
Breid, Sara
Nill, Marieke
Fassunke, Jana
Wisdom, Amy J.
Compes, Anik
Gathof, Birgit
Alakus, Hakan
Kirsch, David
Hekmat, Khosro
Buettner, Reinhard
Reinhardt, H. Christian
Hallek, Michael
Ullrich, Roland T.
Borchmann, Sven
Selenz, Carolin
Lohmann, Mia
Ludwig, Hanna
Gassa, Asmae
Braegelmann, Johannes
Lohneis, Philipp
Meder, Lydia
Mattlener, Julia
Breid, Sara
Nill, Marieke
Fassunke, Jana
Wisdom, Amy J.
Compes, Anik
Gathof, Birgit
Alakus, Hakan
Kirsch, David
Hekmat, Khosro
Buettner, Reinhard
Reinhardt, H. Christian
Hallek, Michael
Ullrich, Roland T.
Publication Year :
2022

Abstract

Background Single-agent immunotherapy has shown remarkable efficacy in selected cancer entities and individual patients. However, most patients fail to respond. This is likely due to diverse immunosuppressive mechanisms acting in a concerted way to suppress the host anti-tumor immune response. Combination immunotherapy approaches that are effective in such poorly immunogenic tumors mostly rely on precise knowledge of antigenic determinants on tumor cells. Creating an antigen-agnostic combination immunotherapy that is effective in poorly immunogenic tumors for which an antigenic determinant is not known is a major challenge. Methods We use multiple cell line and poorly immunogenic syngeneic, autochthonous, and autologous mouse models to evaluate the efficacy of a novel combination immunotherapy named tripartite immunotherapy (TRI-IT). To elucidate TRI-ITs mechanism of action we use immune cell depletions and comprehensive tumor and immune infiltrate characterization by flow cytometry, RNA sequencing and diverse functional assays. Results We show that combined adoptive cellular therapy (ACT) with lymphokine-activated killer cells, cytokine-induced killer cells, V gamma 9V delta 2-T-cells (gamma delta-T-cells) and T-cells enriched for tumor recognition (CTLs) display synergistic antitumor effects, which are further enhanced by cotreatment with anti-PD1 antibodies. Most strikingly, the full TRI-IT protocol, a combination of this ACT with anti-PD1 antibodies, local immunotherapy of agonists against toll-like receptor 3, 7 and 9 and pre-ACT lymphodepletion, eradicates and induces durable anti-tumor immunity in a variety of poorly immunogenic syngeneic, autochthonous, as well as autologous humanized patient-derived models. Mechanistically, we show that TRI-IT coactivates adaptive cellular and humoral, as well as innate antitumor immune responses to mediate its antitumor effect without inducing off-target toxicity. Conclusions Overall, TRI-IT is a novel, highly effective, a

Details

Database :
OAIster
Notes :
English
Publication Type :
Electronic Resource
Accession number :
edsoai.on1383743351
Document Type :
Electronic Resource