| Literature DB >> 25949916 |
Catherine Flores1, Christina Pham1, David Snyder2, Shicheng Yang2, Luis Sanchez-Perez2, Elias Sayour1, Xiuyu Cui2, Hanna Kemeny2, Henry Friedman2, Darell D Bigner3, John Sampson4, Duane A Mitchell1.
Abstract
Adoptive cellular therapy (ACT) after lymphodepletive conditioning can induce dramatic clinical responses, but this approach has been largely limited to melanoma due to a lack of reliable methods for expanding tumor-specific lymphocytes from the majority of other solid cancers. We have employed tumor RNA-pulsed dendritic cells (DCs) to reliably expand CD4+ and CD8+ tumor-reactive T lymphocytes for curative ACT in a highly-invasive, chemotherapy- and radiation-resistant malignant glioma model. Curative treatment of established intracranial tumors involved a synergistic interaction between myeloablative (MA) conditioning, adoptively transferred tumor-specific T cells, and tumor RNA-pulsed DC vaccines. Hematopoietic stem cells (HSCs), administered for salvage from MA conditioning, rapidly migrated to areas of intracranial tumor growth and facilitated the recruitment of tumor-specific lymphocytes through HSC-elaborated chemokines and enhanced immunologic rejection of intracranial tumors during ACT. Furthermore, HSC transplant under non-myeloablative (NMA) conditions also enhanced immunologic tumor rejection, indicating a novel role for the use of HSCs in the immunologic treatment of malignant gliomas and possibly other solid tumors.Entities:
Keywords: ACT, adoptive cellular therapy; CAR, chimeric antigen receptor; CBA, cytokine bead array; CCL3, (MIP1α) macrophage inhibitory protein 1; CXCL12, (SDF1) stromal derived factor 1; DC, dendritic cell; FACS, fluorescence activated cell sorting; GBM; HSC, haematopoietic stem cell; IFNγ, interferon gamma; IL-15, interleukin 15; IL-7, interleukin 7; MA, myeloablative; NMA, non-myeloablative; OVA, ovalbumin; SEM, standard error of mean; TAA, tumor associated antigens; TCR, T cell receptor; TMZ, temozolomide; TNFα, tumor necrosis factor α; TTRNA-T cells, tumor-specific T cells activated ex vivo using RNA-pulsed DCs; WBI, whole brain irradiation.; cellular therapy; glioblastoma; glioma; hematopoietic stem cells; immunotherapy
Year: 2015 PMID: 25949916 PMCID: PMC4404923 DOI: 10.4161/2162402X.2014.994374
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Oncoimmunology ISSN: 2162-4011 Impact factor: 8.110
Figure 1.Highly invasive radiation and chemotherapy resistant glioma. (A) KR158B intracranial glioma is a highly invasive intracranial glioma that forms glioma islands and closely resembles primary human glioma. Shown is H&E stain of formalin-fixed, paraffin-embedded section (7 micron) taken from mice with established tumor. (B) Treatment with standard therapy with either whole brain radiation therapy (WBRT) or Temozolomide (TMZ) did not provide a survival benefit; however, the combination of WBRT+TMZ provided a modest increase in median survival, 38 d vs. 43 d, p = 0.0389 Gehan–Breslow–Wilcoxon test.
Figure 2.In vitro expanded antitumor T cells target glioma cells with specificity. (A) In vitro expanded Ovalbumin (OVA) antigen specific T cells or total tumor antigen specific T cells (TTRNA-T cells) secrete pro-inflammatory cytokines TNFα and IFNγ after recognition of cognate antigen expressed by DC2.4 cells electroporated with either OVA RNA or KR158B RNA (TTRNA) or syngeneic tumor cells. (B) In vitro expanded TTRNA T cells were magnetically sorted into CD4+ and CD8+ TTRNA T cells after expansion, and both T cell populations secreted TNFα and IFNγ upon recognition of cells expressing TTRNA. N = 5 replicates.
Figure 3.In vitro expanded antitumor T cells are efficacious against intracranial glioma. (A) Prolonged survival in mice treated with ACT. Mice with established intracranial glioma received ACT, in the context of MA + HSC transplant. Mice received either MA + HSC alone, MA + HSC + adoptive transfer of TTRNA T cells, MA + HSC + DC vaccine, or MA + HSC + TTRNA T cells + DC vaccine. (B) Glioma bearing mice received ACT using either in vitro expanded OVA specific T cells followed by OVA-RNA pulsed DC vaccine, or tumor specific T cells (TTRNA) followed by total tumor RNA-pulsed DC vaccination. Antitumor efficacy was only observed using tumor-specific TTRNA T lymphocytes. ACT was conducted using TTRNA T cells from DsRed+ mice. Host vs. adoptively transferred lymphocytes in ACT treated mice were FACS sorted as DsRed− or DsRed+ lymphocytes respectively (n = 5 animals). (C) Cytokine secretion of host splenocytes after co-culture against glioma targets. (D) TNFα and IFNγ secretion of adoptively transferred antitumor T lymphocytes upon recognition of KR158B tumor cells.
Figure 4.DC vaccine is required for T cell persistence. (A) In vivo frequency of adoptively transferred antitumor DsRed+ T lymphocytes was measured in lymph nodes one week after ACT without RNA-pulsed DC vaccine or (B) after RNA-pulsed DC vaccine. (C) Enumeration of DsRed+ adoptively transferred T cells in lymph nodes with or without DC vaccination (*p = 0.002, Mann–Whitney test, n = 6).
Figure 5.HSC transplant increases T cell trafficking to the glioma site. (A) GFP+ adoptively transferred antitumor T cells and DsRed+ HSCs were observed co-localizing at the glioma bed in mice that received ACT (image is 10× magnification). (B) T cell migration to intracranial glioma in the presence or absence of HSCs was enumerated one week post adoptive transfer (*p = 0.0015, Wilcoxon test, n = 12). (C) Chemokine array determined that KR158B glioma cells do not secrete crucial lymphocyte recruiting chemokine CCL3. (D) The capacity of glioma specific T cells to migrate toward glioma cells with or without HSCs was assessed using in vitro migration assays. HSC derived CCL3 was blocked using neutralizing antibodies. (**p = 0.0055, Wilcoxon test, n = 5).
Figure 6.HSC-derived CCL3 mediates T cell trafficking to intracranial glioma. (A) KR158B glioma bearing mice received either wild type HSCs or (B) HSCs derived from CCL3 knockout mice directly into the glioma bed and intravenous injection of DsRed tumor-specific T cells. Intratumoral T cell infiltration was measured using fluorescent microscopy 24 h after adoptive transfer. (C) Quantification of adoptively transferred T cells within the tumor site (n = 5; Two-tailed t test, *p = 0.0219). HSCs from wildtype mice show enhanced T cell trafficking to tumor.
Figure 7.HSC transfer enhances immunologic glioma rejection. (A) Intracranial astrocytoma bearing mice received adoptive immunotherapy consisting of antitumor T lymphocytes followed by DC vaccine, with or without HSC transfer. Bioluminescent imaging of tumor growth in untreated animals (tumor only), animals receiving tumor-specific T cells plus DC vaccine only (T cells + DC), or lymphoyctes, DC vaccination, and HSC transfer (T cells + DC + HSC) was evaluated at day 14. (B) Impact of HSC transplant on tumor growth was evaluated in mice receiving NMA conditioning and ACT with or without HSCs by bioluminescent imaging (n = 3, Mixed effects linear model analysis, *p = 0.007).