| Literature DB >> 28967901 |
V Mett1, E A Komarova2, K Greene2, I Bespalov1, C Brackett2, B Gillard3, A S Gleiberman1, I A Toshkov1, S Aygün-Sunar1, C Johnson2, E Karasik3, M Bapardekar-Nair1, O V Kurnasov4, A L Osterman4, P S Stanhope-Baker1, C Morrison5, M T Moser3, B A Foster3, A V Gudkov1,2.
Abstract
Toll-like receptor 5 (TLR5) is considered an attractive target for anticancer immunotherapy. TLR5 agonists, bacterial flagellin and engineered flagellin derivatives, have been shown to have potent antitumor and metastasis-suppressive effects in multiple animal models and to be safe in both animals and humans. Anticancer efficacy of TLR5 agonists stems from TLR5-dependent activation of nuclear factor-κB (NF-κB) that mediates innate and adaptive antitumor immune responses. To extend application of TLR5-targeted anticancer immunotherapy to tumors that do not naturally express TLR5, we created an adenovirus-based vector for intratumor delivery, named Mobilan that drives expression of self-activating TLR5 signaling cassette comprising of human TLR5 and a secreted derivative of Salmonella flagellin structurally analogous to a clinical stage TLR5 agonist, entolimod. Co-expression of TLR5 receptor and agonist in Mobilan-infected cells established an autocrine/paracrine TLR5 signaling loop resulting in constitutive activation of NF-κB both in vitro and in vivo. Injection of Mobilan into primary tumors of the prostate cancer-prone transgenic adenocarcinoma of the mouse prostate (TRAMP) mice resulted in a strong induction of multiple genes involved in inflammatory responses and mobilization of innate immune cells into the tumors including neutrophils and NK cells and suppressed tumor progression. Intratumoral injection of Mobilan into subcutaneously growing syngeneic prostate tumors in immunocompetent hosts improved animal survival after surgical resection of the tumors, by suppression of tumor metastasis. In addition, vaccination of mice with irradiated Mobilan-transduced prostate tumor cells protected mice against subsequent tumor challenge. These results provide proof-of-concept for Mobilan as a tool for antitumor vaccination that directs TLR5-mediated immune response toward cancer cells and does not require identification of tumor antigens.Entities:
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2017 PMID: 28967901 PMCID: PMC5799711 DOI: 10.1038/onc.2017.346
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Oncogene ISSN: 0950-9232 Impact factor: 9.867
Figure 1Adenoviral constructs and their characterization in vitro. (A) Schematic representation of expression cassettes in (a) Mobilan M-0, (b) Mobilan M-VM3, and (c) Ad-mCherry. P, promoter, T, transcription terminator. (B) Western blot analysis of Mobilan-directed protein expression in MOSEC cells. (a) Detection with anti-TLR5 antibody; lysates from uninfected (lane 1) and M-0-infected MOSEC cells (lane 2). (b) Detection with rabbit anti-CBLB502 pAb; lysates from M-0-infected MOSEC cells left untreated (lane 1) or treated with a mixture of deglycosylation enzymes (lane 2). (C) Activity comparison of E. coli-produced CBLB502 and CBLB502NQs in HEK293-NF-κB-lacZ reporter cells. Cells were incubated with purified proteins for 24 h; β-galactosidase activity (OD414) was measured in cell lysates using ONPG substrate. (D) Activity comparison of CBLB502s and CBLB502NQs produced in MOSEC cells. MOSEC cells were infected with M-0 or M-VM3, medium was collected after 48 h and the concentrations of CBLB502s and CBLB502NQs were measured by ELISA after heat-inactivation of residual adenovirus. The indicated amounts of MOSEC-produced proteins or E. coli-produced CBLB502 standard were applied to HEK293-NF-κB-lacZ cells and β-galactosidase was measured as above. (E) Western blot analysis of MOSEC cells infected with Ad-mCherry (lane 1), M-0 (lane 2) or M-VM3 (lane 3) using rabbit anti-CBLB502 pAb. The protein with slower mobility in lane 3 is the expected size of unglycosylated CBLB502NQs (31.5 kDa); the faster mobility protein is presumably a partially degraded form of CBLB502NQs. (F) Infection with M-VM3 (MOI=3 × 104) induces NF-κB p65 nuclear translocation in TLR5-negative MOSEC cells 24 h after infection compared with control uninfected MOSEC cells. Antibodies against NF-κB p65 were used for immunostaining. (G) Induction of NF-κB-dependent luciferase expression in TRAMP-C2 cells infected by M-VM3. TRAMP-C2 cells carrying an NF-κB-dependent luciferase reporter construct were infected with M-VM3 or Ad-mCherry at the indicated MOIs. Luciferase activity was measured in lysates prepared 48 h post-infection and is shown as a percentage of that in uninfected cells (set at 100%). (H) Effect of neutralizing anti-CBLB502 antibodies on TLR5 signaling in M-VM3-infected MOSEC-NF-κB-luciferase reporter cells. Cells were infected with M-VM3 in the presence or absence of an excess of neutralizing rabbit anti-CBLB502 pAb. Luciferase activity was measured after 80-h incubation. Graphs show mean±s.d. of triplicate measurements.
Figure 2Mouse and human prostate tumors express CAR and are efficiently infected by Ad-mCherry. (a) A representative area of a human prostate tumor microarray (RPCI) stained with anti-CAR antibodies (T—tumor and N—normal prostate tissue samples). (b) Expression of CAR (green) in TRAMP-C2 cells revealed by immunofluorescent staining with anti-CAR antibodies. (c) A TRAMP mouse prostate tumor was injected with Ad-mCherry (5 × 108 v.p./tumor). Twenty-four hours later, CAR (green) and mCherry (red) expression were detected in tumor epithelial cells positive for CK8/18, a marker of epithelial cells (lilac). The upper left picture shows an overlay of CAR and mCherry fluorescence. (d) A human prostate tumor surgical sample (RPCI) was injected with AdCherry (5 × 108 v.p./tumor). Twenty-four hours later, CAR (green) and mCherry (red) expression was detected in tumor epithelial cells positive for Troma I, a marker of epithelial cells (lilac). The upper left picture shows an overlay of CAR and mCherry fluorescence.
Figure 3Induction of NF-κB activity in reporter mice after administration of M-VM3. (a) M-VM3 induces long-term activation of NF-κB in live mouse hepatocytes carrying an introduced NF-κB-dependent luciferase reporter construct. Cells were infected with M-VM3 (MOI=104) or Ad-mCherry (MOI=104) or treated with entolimod (0.1 mg/ml) or PBS (control), then these agents were removed from the media (3 h for Ad and 1 h for entolimod) and luciferase was measured by LumiCycle. The level of luciferase activity from PBS-treated cells was subtracted. (b) BALB/C-Tg(IkBa-luc)-Xen mice were given a single intraprostate injection of PBS, CBLB502 (1 μg per mouse) or M-VM3 (1 × 109 v.p.) and analyzed 3, 24 or 48 h later by whole-body Xenogen bio-luminescence imaging of live anesthetized animals. (c) Measurement of luciferase activity in liver (L), intestine (I) and prostate tissue (P) extracts of NF-κB-luciferase reporter mice BALB/C-Tg(IkBa-luc)-Xen after intravenous and intraprostate injections (48 h) of M-VM3. Relative light unit (RLU) values (per mg of total protein) in tissue extracts of M-VM3-treated mice were calculated by subtraction of RLU values for PBS-treated mice.
Figure 4In vivo effect of M-VM3 on prostate tumors in mouse TRAMP model. (a) Average weight of prostate ventral lobes 6 weeks after intraprostate injections of M-VM3, Ad-mCherry and PBS of 45 12-week-old TRAMP mice (15 mice per group, error bars indicate s.e.m.). (b) Hematoxylin and eosin (H&E)-stained prostate sections were prepared 6 weeks after intraprostate injection of M-VM3 or PBS. Increased infiltration of lymphoid/mononuclear/macrophage cells (red arrowhead) in the interstitium between prostate lobes in M-VM3-injected TRAMP mice compared with PBS-injected TRAMP mice. Atrophic and degenerative changes (areas with yellow asterisks) in whole lobes of prostates from TRAMP mice treated with M-VM3.
Figure 5Quantitative analysis of innate and adaptive immune cell populations recruited to TRAMP tumors and tumor-draining lymph nodes (TDLNs) following i.t. injection of Ad-mCherry or M-VM3. Palpable spontaneously developed prostate tumors (a–e) and TDLNs (f) from tumor-bearing TRAMP mice were collected 2 (for neutrophils) or 7 days (for NK and T cells) after i.t. injection of PBS (vehicle), Ad-mCherry (control) or M-VM3 (109 v.p total per three points). Specific immune cell populations within the samples were quantified by fluorescence-activated cell sorting (FACS) and are reported as absolute number of cells per gram of prostate tissue or per TDLN. (a) Neutrophils were defined as CD45+CD11b+CD11c-Ly-6Clo/-Ly-6Ghi; (b) NK cells were defined as CD45+CD3ε-NK1.1+; (c) CD8+ T cells were defined as CD45+CD3ε+CD8+; (d) CD4+ T cells were defined as CD45+CD3ε+FoxP3-CD4+; and (e, f) Tregs were defined as CD45+CD3ε+CD4+FoxP3+ in tumors and TDLN. Data are shown as mean±s.e.m. (N=3–7 mice per group).
Figure 6Antitumor effects of M-VM3. (a) TRAMP-C2 tumors were grown s.c. in C57BL/6 mice and injected i.t. with PBS, Ad-mCherry (5 × 108 v.p.) or M-VM3 (5 × 108 v.p.) on day 0. Tumors were surgically removed on day 7 and the mice were monitored for survival in a blinded manner until day 150. (b) C57BL/6 mice (n=10 per group) were vaccinated s.c. with M-VM3- or Ad-mCherry-infected (irradiated 48 h after virus infection) or uninfected irradiated TRAMP-C2 cells. A fourth group of mice was not vaccinated. Mice were vaccinated on days 0, 14 and 21 and then challenged with TRAMP-C2 cells by s.c. injection 14 days after the last vaccination. Tumor growth was monitored for 38 days post-challenge or until tumors reached the endpoint size that required killing. Percentage of tumor-free mice was determined at day 38 post-challenge.