Draghiciu Oana, Nijman Hans W, Hoogeboom Baukje Nynke, Meijerhof Tjarko, Daemen Toos
Department of Medical Microbiology, Tumor Virology and Cancer Immunotherapy; University of Groningen; University Medical Center Groningen ; Groningen, the Netherlands.
Department of Gynecology; University of Groningen; University Medical Center Groningen ; Groningen, the Netherlands.
Oncoimmunology. 2015 Jan 7;4(3):e989764. doi: 10.4161/2162402X.2014.989764. eCollection 2015 Mar.
The high efficacy of therapeutic cancer vaccines in preclinical studies has yet to be fully achieved in clinical trials. Tumor immune suppression is a critical factor that hampers the desired antitumor effect. Here, we analyzed the combined effect of a cancer vaccine and the receptor tyrosine kinase inhibitor sunitinib. Sunitinib was administered intraperitoneally, alone or in combination with intramuscular immunization using a viral vector based cancer vaccine composed of Semliki Forest virus replicon particles and encoding the oncoproteins E6 and E7 (SFVeE6,7) of human papilloma virus (HPV). We first demonstrated that treatment of tumor-bearing mice with sunitinib alone dose-dependently depleted myeloid-derived suppressor cells (MDSCs) in the tumor, spleen and in circulation. Concomitantly, the number of CD8 T cells increased 2-fold and, on the basis of CD69 expression, their activation status was greatly enhanced. The intrinsic immunosuppressive activity of residual MDSCs after sunitinib treatment was not changed in a dose-dependent fashion. We next combined sunitinib treatment with SFVeE6,7 immunization. This combined treatment resulted in a 1.5- and 3-fold increase of E7-specific cytotoxic T lymphocytes (CTLs) present within the circulation and tumor, respectively, as compared to immunization only. The ratio of E7-specific CTLs to MDSCs in blood thereby increased 10- to 20-fold and in tumors up to 12.5-fold. As a result, the combined treatment strongly enhanced the antitumor effect of the cancer vaccine. This study demonstrates that sunitinib creates a favorable microenvironment depleted of MDSCs and acts synergistically with a cancer vaccine resulting in enhanced levels of active tumor-antigen specific CTLs, thus changing the balance in favor of antitumor immunity.
治疗性癌症疫苗在临床前研究中的高效性在临床试验中尚未完全实现。肿瘤免疫抑制是阻碍预期抗肿瘤效果的关键因素。在此,我们分析了癌症疫苗与受体酪氨酸激酶抑制剂舒尼替尼的联合作用。舒尼替尼通过腹腔注射给药,单独使用或与基于病毒载体的癌症疫苗联合进行肌肉注射,该疫苗由塞姆利基森林病毒复制子颗粒组成,并编码人乳头瘤病毒(HPV)的癌蛋白E6和E7(SFVeE6,7)。我们首先证明,单独用舒尼替尼治疗荷瘤小鼠可剂量依赖性地减少肿瘤、脾脏和循环系统中髓源性抑制细胞(MDSC)的数量。与此同时,CD8 T细胞数量增加了2倍,并且根据CD69的表达情况,其激活状态得到了极大增强。舒尼替尼治疗后残余MDSC的内在免疫抑制活性并未呈剂量依赖性改变。接下来,我们将舒尼替尼治疗与SFVeE6,7免疫接种相结合。与仅进行免疫接种相比,这种联合治疗分别使循环系统和肿瘤中E7特异性细胞毒性T淋巴细胞(CTL)的数量增加了1.5倍和3倍。因此,血液中E7特异性CTL与MDSC的比例增加了10至20倍,在肿瘤中增加了高达12.5倍。结果,联合治疗强烈增强了癌症疫苗的抗肿瘤效果。这项研究表明,舒尼替尼可创造一个MDSC缺失的有利微环境,并与癌症疫苗协同作用,导致活性肿瘤抗原特异性CTL水平升高,从而改变平衡,有利于抗肿瘤免疫。