Renner Danielle N, Jin Fang, Litterman Adam J, Balgeman Alexis J, Hanson Lisa M, Gamez Jeffrey D, Chae Michael, Carlson Brett L, Sarkaria Jann N, Parney Ian F, Ohlfest John R, Pirko Istvan, Pavelko Kevin D, Johnson Aaron J
Neurobiology of Disease Graduate Program, Mayo Clinic, Rochester, MN, United States of America; Department of Immunology, Mayo Clinic, Rochester, MN, United States of America.
Department of Immunology, Mayo Clinic, Rochester, MN, United States of America.
PLoS One. 2015 May 1;10(5):e0125565. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0125565. eCollection 2015.
Glioblastoma (GBM) is among the most invasive and lethal of cancers, frequently infiltrating surrounding healthy tissue and giving rise to rapid recurrence. It is therefore critical to establish experimental model systems and develop therapeutic approaches that enhance anti-tumor immunity. In the current study, we have employed a newly developed murine glioma model to assess the efficacy of a novel picornavirus vaccination approach for the treatment of established tumors. The GL261-Quad system is a variation of the GL261 syngeneic glioma that has been engineered to expresses model T cell epitopes including OVA257-264. MRI revealed that both GL261 and GL261-Quad tumors display characteristic features of human gliomas such as heterogeneous gadolinium leakage and larger T2 weighted volumes. Analysis of brain-infiltrating immune cells demonstrated that GL261-Quad gliomas generate detectable CD8+ T cell responses toward the tumor-specific Kb:OVA257-264 antigen. Enhancing this response via a single intracranial or peripheral vaccination with picornavirus expressing the OVA257-264 antigen increased anti-tumor CD8+ T cells infiltrating the brain, attenuated progression of established tumors, and extended survival of treated mice. Importantly, the efficacy of the picornavirus vaccination is dependent on functional cytotoxic activity of CD8+ T cells, as the beneficial response was completely abrogated in mice lacking perforin expression. Therefore, we have developed a novel system for evaluating mechanisms of anti-tumor immunity in vivo, incorporating the GL261-Quad model, 3D volumetric MRI, and picornavirus vaccination to enhance tumor-specific cytotoxic CD8+ T cell responses and track their effectiveness at eradicating established gliomas in vivo.
胶质母细胞瘤(GBM)是最具侵袭性和致命性的癌症之一,经常浸润周围健康组织并导致快速复发。因此,建立实验模型系统并开发增强抗肿瘤免疫力的治疗方法至关重要。在本研究中,我们采用了一种新开发的小鼠胶质瘤模型来评估一种新型微小核糖核酸病毒疫苗接种方法对已建立肿瘤的治疗效果。GL261-Quad系统是GL261同基因胶质瘤的变体,已被设计用于表达包括OVA257-264在内的模型T细胞表位。磁共振成像(MRI)显示,GL261和GL261-Quad肿瘤均表现出人类胶质瘤的特征性特征,如钆不均匀渗漏和更大的T2加权体积。对脑浸润免疫细胞的分析表明,GL261-Quad胶质瘤对肿瘤特异性Kb:OVA257-264抗原产生可检测到的CD8+T细胞反应。通过用表达OVA257-264抗原的微小核糖核酸病毒进行单次颅内或外周接种来增强这种反应,可增加浸润脑内的抗肿瘤CD8+T细胞,减轻已建立肿瘤的进展,并延长治疗小鼠的生存期。重要的是,微小核糖核酸病毒疫苗接种的疗效取决于CD8+T细胞的功能性细胞毒性活性,因为在缺乏穿孔素表达的小鼠中,有益反应完全消失。因此,我们开发了一种用于在体内评估抗肿瘤免疫机制的新型系统,该系统结合了GL261-Quad模型、三维容积MRI和微小核糖核酸病毒疫苗接种,以增强肿瘤特异性细胞毒性CD8+T细胞反应,并追踪它们在体内根除已建立的胶质瘤的有效性。