4.7 Article

A heat-shocked melanoma cell lysate vaccine enhances tumor infiltration by prototypic effector T cells inhibiting tumor growth

Journal

JOURNAL FOR IMMUNOTHERAPY OF CANCER
Volume 8, Issue 2, Pages -

Publisher

BMJ PUBLISHING GROUP
DOI: 10.1136/jitc-2020-000999

Keywords

immunotherapy; active; melanoma; immunogenicity; vaccine; alarmins; therapies; investigational

Funding

  1. National Fund for Scientific and Technological Development [FONDECYT 1171213, 11160380, 3170917]
  2. Fund for the Promotion of Scientific and Technological Development [FONDEF ID16I10148]
  3. Millennium Science Initiative from the Ministry for the Economy, Development and Tourism [P09/016-F]

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Background Immune checkpoint blocker (ICB) therapy has shown survival benefits for some patients with cancer. Nevertheless, many individuals remain refractory or acquire resistance to treatment, motivating the exploration of complementary immunotherapies. Accordingly, cancer vaccines offer an attractive alternative. Optimal delivery of multiple tumor-associated antigens combined with potent adjuvants seems to be crucial for vaccine effectiveness. Methods Here, a prototype for a generic melanoma vaccine, named TRIMELVax, was tested using B16F10 mouse melanoma model. This vaccine is made of heat shock-treated tumor cell lysates combined with theConcholepas concholepashemocyanin as adjuvant. Results While B16F10 lysate provides appropriate melanoma-associated antigens, both a generic human melanoma cell lysate and hemocyanin adjuvant contributes with danger signals promoting conventional dendritic type 1 cells (cDC1), activation, phagocytosis and effective antigen cross-presentation. TRIMELVax inhibited tumor growth and increased mice survival, inducing cellular and humoral immune responses. Furthermore, this vaccine generated an increased frequency of intratumor cDC1s but not conventional type 2 dendritic cells (cDC2s). Augmented infiltration of CD3(+), CD4(+)and CD8(+)T cells was also observed, compared with anti-programmed cell death protein 1 (PD-1) monotherapy, while TRIMELVax/anti-PD-1 combination generated higher tumor infiltration of CD4(+)T cells. Moreover, TRIMELVax promoted an augmented proportion of PD-1(lo)CD8(+)T cells in tumors, a phenotype associated with prototypic effector cells required for tumor growth control, preventing dysfunctional T-cell accumulation. Conclusions The therapeutic vaccine TRIMELVax efficiently controls the weakly immunogenic and aggressive B16F10 melanoma tumor growth, prolonging tumor-bearing mice survival even in the absence of ICB. The strong immunogenicity shown by TRIMELVax encourages clinical studies in patients with melanoma.

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