Pamela C. Rosato, Sathi Wijeyesinghe, J. Stolley, Christine E. Nelson, Rachel L. Davis, Luke S Manlove, C. Pennell, B. Blazar, Clark C. Chen, M. Geller, V. Vezys, D. Masopust
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We observed that, like healthy tissue, human tumors are commonly surveyed by memory T-cells specific for previously encountered viral infections. Antiviral T-cell immune surveillance of tumors was recapitulated in mouse cancer models. We tested and discovered that local delivery of adjuvant-free peptide, derived from previously encountered mouse viral infections, recapitulated the sensing and alarm T-cell function within the tumor: recruiting and activating both the innate and adaptive immune system. This approach induced intratumoral accumulation of granzyme B+ CD8+ T and NK cells, and activated dendritic cells within the tumor and subsequently within the tumor draining lymph node. In addition to stimulating the tumor microenvironment, preliminary data suggest activated antiviral T-cells directly killed peptide coated tumor cells. Viral peptide administration arrested rapidly growing and poorly immunogenic B16 melanomas in vivo and this treatment synergized with anti-PD-L1 checkpoint blockade to eliminate measurable tumors, and prevented recurrence in 34% of mice. Most cured mice rejected subsequent B16 tumor challenges at distant sites, indicating that effective systemic tumor-specific immunity was established. In support of the hypothesis that this approach could translate to human cancer immunotherapy, we found that viral peptide alarm therapy of freshly isolated human tumors drove similar immune activation to that observed in mice. This study demonstrates that natural and existing antiviral immunity can be repurposed to fight tumors without the need for adjuvant, vaccination, or personalized identification of immunogenic tumor neoantigens. Citation Format: Pamela C. Rosato, Sathi Wijeyesinghe, J. Michael Stolley, Christine Nelson, Rachel L. Davis, Luke S. Manlove, Christopher A. Pennell, Bruce R. Blazar, Clark C. Chen, Melissa A. Geller, Vaiva Vezys, David Masopust. Repurposing antiviral T-cells to fight tumors [abstract]. In: Proceedings of the Fourth CRI-CIMT-EATI-AACR International Cancer Immunotherapy Conference: Translating Science into Survival; Sept 30-Oct 3, 2018; New York, NY. Philadelphia (PA): AACR; Cancer Immunol Res 2019;7(2 Suppl):Abstract nr B182.","PeriodicalId":120683,"journal":{"name":"Other Topics","volume":"21 1","pages":"0"},"PeriodicalIF":0.0000,"publicationDate":"2019-02-01","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"0","resultStr":"{\"title\":\"Abstract B182: Repurposing antiviral T-cells to fight tumors\",\"authors\":\"Pamela C. Rosato, Sathi Wijeyesinghe, J. Stolley, Christine E. Nelson, Rachel L. Davis, Luke S Manlove, C. Pennell, B. Blazar, Clark C. Chen, M. Geller, V. Vezys, D. 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引用次数: 0
摘要
克服免疫抑制肿瘤微环境和将过继细胞和检查点阻断疗法定位于实体瘤仍然是成功的癌症免疫治疗的主要障碍。人类经历过许多病毒感染。一旦受到控制,宿主就会在全身保留记忆t细胞,以感知再感染或复发。小鼠模型已经证明,当再次遇到相同的病毒时,这些t细胞会发出警报,诱导局部免疫刺激环境,激活并招募免疫系统的许多分支。我们观察到,像健康组织一样,人类肿瘤通常由先前遇到病毒感染的特异性记忆t细胞调查。在小鼠肿瘤模型中重现了抗病毒t细胞对肿瘤的免疫监视。我们测试并发现,来自先前遇到的小鼠病毒感染的无佐剂肽的局部递送再现了肿瘤内的传感和报警t细胞功能:招募和激活先天和适应性免疫系统。这种方法诱导肿瘤内颗粒酶B+ CD8+ T和NK细胞的积累,并激活肿瘤内的树突状细胞,随后激活肿瘤引流淋巴结内的树突状细胞。除了刺激肿瘤微环境外,初步数据表明激活的抗病毒t细胞直接杀死肽包被的肿瘤细胞。病毒肽在体内抑制快速生长和免疫原性差的B16黑色素瘤,这种治疗与抗pd - l1检查点阻断协同消除可测量的肿瘤,并在34%的小鼠中防止复发。大多数治愈的小鼠在远处部位拒绝了后续的B16肿瘤攻击,表明有效的全身肿瘤特异性免疫已经建立。为了支持这种方法可以转化为人类癌症免疫治疗的假设,我们发现新分离的人类肿瘤的病毒肽警报治疗驱动了与小鼠观察到的相似的免疫激活。这项研究表明,天然和现有的抗病毒免疫可以被重新利用来对抗肿瘤,而不需要佐剂、疫苗接种或免疫原性肿瘤新抗原的个性化鉴定。引文格式:Pamela C. Rosato, Sathi Wijeyesinghe, J. Michael Stolley, Christine Nelson, Rachel L. Davis, Luke S. Manlove, Christopher A. Pennell, Bruce R. Blazar, Clark C. Chen, Melissa A. Geller, Vaiva Vezys, David Masopust。利用抗病毒t细胞对抗肿瘤[摘要]。第四届CRI-CIMT-EATI-AACR国际癌症免疫治疗会议:将科学转化为生存;2018年9月30日至10月3日;纽约,纽约。费城(PA): AACR;癌症免疫学杂志2019;7(2增刊):摘要nr B182。
Abstract B182: Repurposing antiviral T-cells to fight tumors
Overcoming the immunosuppressive tumor microenvironment and localizing adoptive cell and checkpoint blockade therapies to solid tumors remain major impediments to successful cancer immunotherapy. Humans experience many viral infections. Once controlled, the host retains memory T-cells throughout the entire body to sense reinfection or recrudescence. Mouse models have demonstrated that when that same virus is reencountered, these T-cells sound an alarm that induces a local immunostimulatory environment that activates and recruits many arms of the immune system. We observed that, like healthy tissue, human tumors are commonly surveyed by memory T-cells specific for previously encountered viral infections. Antiviral T-cell immune surveillance of tumors was recapitulated in mouse cancer models. We tested and discovered that local delivery of adjuvant-free peptide, derived from previously encountered mouse viral infections, recapitulated the sensing and alarm T-cell function within the tumor: recruiting and activating both the innate and adaptive immune system. This approach induced intratumoral accumulation of granzyme B+ CD8+ T and NK cells, and activated dendritic cells within the tumor and subsequently within the tumor draining lymph node. In addition to stimulating the tumor microenvironment, preliminary data suggest activated antiviral T-cells directly killed peptide coated tumor cells. Viral peptide administration arrested rapidly growing and poorly immunogenic B16 melanomas in vivo and this treatment synergized with anti-PD-L1 checkpoint blockade to eliminate measurable tumors, and prevented recurrence in 34% of mice. Most cured mice rejected subsequent B16 tumor challenges at distant sites, indicating that effective systemic tumor-specific immunity was established. In support of the hypothesis that this approach could translate to human cancer immunotherapy, we found that viral peptide alarm therapy of freshly isolated human tumors drove similar immune activation to that observed in mice. This study demonstrates that natural and existing antiviral immunity can be repurposed to fight tumors without the need for adjuvant, vaccination, or personalized identification of immunogenic tumor neoantigens. Citation Format: Pamela C. Rosato, Sathi Wijeyesinghe, J. Michael Stolley, Christine Nelson, Rachel L. Davis, Luke S. Manlove, Christopher A. Pennell, Bruce R. Blazar, Clark C. Chen, Melissa A. Geller, Vaiva Vezys, David Masopust. Repurposing antiviral T-cells to fight tumors [abstract]. In: Proceedings of the Fourth CRI-CIMT-EATI-AACR International Cancer Immunotherapy Conference: Translating Science into Survival; Sept 30-Oct 3, 2018; New York, NY. Philadelphia (PA): AACR; Cancer Immunol Res 2019;7(2 Suppl):Abstract nr B182.