Laboratory of Cellular Oncology, National Cancer Institute, NIH, Bethesda, MD 20892.
Laboratory of Molecular Immunology, National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases, NIH, Bethesda, MD 20892.
Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A. 2022 Jun 28;119(26):e2116738119. doi: 10.1073/pnas.2116738119. Epub 2022 Jun 24.
Tumor infiltration by T cells profoundly affects cancer progression and responses to immunotherapy. However, the tumor immunosuppressive microenvironment can impair the induction, trafficking, and local activity of antitumor T cells. Here, we investigated whether intratumoral injection of virus-derived peptide epitopes could activate preexisting antiviral T cell responses locally and promote antitumor responses or antigen spreading. We focused on a mouse model of cytomegalovirus (CMV), a highly prevalent human infection that induces vigorous and durable T cell responses. Mice persistently infected with murine CMV (MCMV) were challenged with lung (TC-1), colon (MC-38), or melanoma (B16-F10) tumor cells. Intratumoral injection of MCMV-derived T cell epitopes triggered in situ and systemic expansion of their cognate, MCMV-specific CD4 or CD8 T cells. The MCMV CD8 T cell epitopes injected alone provoked arrest of tumor growth and some durable remissions. Intratumoral injection of MCMV CD4 T cell epitopes with polyinosinic acid:polycytidylic acid (pI:C) preferentially elicited tumor antigen-specific CD8 T cells, promoted tumor clearance, and conferred long-term protection against tumor rechallenge. Notably, secondary proliferation of MCMV-specific CD8 T cells correlated with better tumor control. Importantly, intratumoral injection of MCMV-derived CD8 T cell-peptide epitopes alone or CD4 T cell-peptide epitopes with pI:C induced potent adaptive and innate immune activation of the tumor microenvironment. Thus, CMV-derived peptide epitopes, delivered intratumorally, act as cytotoxic and immunotherapeutic agents to promote immediate tumor control and long-term antitumor immunity that could be used as a stand-alone therapy. The tumor antigen-agnostic nature of this approach makes it applicable across a broad range of solid tumors regardless of their origin.
T 细胞浸润对癌症的进展和免疫治疗的反应有深远影响。然而,肿瘤免疫抑制微环境会损害抗肿瘤 T 细胞的诱导、迁移和局部活性。在这里,我们研究了是否可以通过向肿瘤内注射病毒衍生的肽表位来局部激活预先存在的抗病毒 T 细胞反应,并促进抗肿瘤反应或抗原扩散。我们专注于巨细胞病毒(CMV)的小鼠模型,这是一种高度普遍的人类感染,可引起强烈和持久的 T 细胞反应。持续感染小鼠 CMV(MCMV)的小鼠受到肺(TC-1)、结肠(MC-38)或黑色素瘤(B16-F10)肿瘤细胞的挑战。向肿瘤内注射 MCMV 衍生的 T 细胞表位可触发其同源的、MCMV 特异性的 CD4 或 CD8 T 细胞的原位和全身扩增。单独注射 MCMV CD8 T 细胞表位可引起肿瘤生长停滞和一些持久缓解。与聚肌苷酸:聚胞苷酸(pI:C)一起向肿瘤内注射 MCMV CD4 T 细胞表位可优先引发肿瘤抗原特异性 CD8 T 细胞,促进肿瘤清除,并赋予对肿瘤再挑战的长期保护。值得注意的是,MCMV 特异性 CD8 T 细胞的二次增殖与更好的肿瘤控制相关。重要的是,单独向肿瘤内注射 MCMV 衍生的 CD8 T 细胞肽表位或与 pI:C 一起注射 CD4 T 细胞肽表位可引起肿瘤微环境的强烈适应性和先天免疫激活。因此,向肿瘤内递送的 CMV 衍生肽表位可作为细胞毒性和免疫治疗剂,以促进即时肿瘤控制和长期抗肿瘤免疫,可作为单独的治疗方法。这种方法的肿瘤抗原不可知性使其适用于广泛的实体瘤,无论其来源如何。