| Literature DB >> 30788290 |
Benjamin Y Kong1,2,3, Holly Bolton1,2, Julius W Kim1,2, Pablo A Silveira1,2, Phillip D Fromm1,2, Georgina J Clark1,2.
Abstract
Monoclonal antibodies targeting co-inhibitory immune checkpoint molecules have been successful in clinical trials of both solid and hematological malignancies as acknowledged by the 2018 Nobel Prize in Medicine, however improving clinical response rates is now key to expanding their efficacy in areas of unmet medical need. Antibodies to checkpoint inhibitors target molecules on either T cells or tumor cells to stimulate T cells or remove tumor mediated immunosuppression, respectively. However, many of the well-characterized T cell immune checkpoint receptors have their ligands on antigen presenting cells or exert direct effects on those cells. Dendritic cells are the most powerful antigen presenting cells; they possess the ability to elicit antigen-specific responses and have important roles in regulation of immune tolerance. Despite their theoretical benefits in cancer immunotherapy, the translation of DC therapies into the clinic is yet to be fully realized and combining DC-based immunotherapy with immune checkpoint inhibitors is an attractive strategy. This combination takes advantage of the antigen presenting capability of DC to maximize specific immune responses to tumor antigens whilst removing tumor-associated immune inhibitory mechanisms with immune checkpoint inhibition. Here we review the expression and functional effects of immune checkpoint molecules on DC and identify rational combinations for DC vaccination to enhance antigen-specific T cell responses, cytokine production, and promotion of long-lasting immunological memory.Entities:
Keywords: CTLA-4; PD-1; dendritic cells; immune checkpoints; immunotherapy
Year: 2019 PMID: 30788290 PMCID: PMC6372550 DOI: 10.3389/fonc.2019.00050
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Oncol ISSN: 2234-943X Impact factor: 6.244
Figure 1Schematic showing DC vaccination: DC are generated by leucopheresis and isolation by immunoselection, matured ex vivo using cytokines then loaded with tumor antigens prior to injection back into the patient. Immune checkpoint inhibitors (ICI) administered at the time of DC maturation and antigen loading will have direct effects on DC in addition to modulating T cell: tumor interactions, leading to opportunities to modulate immune responses at the level of DC, T cell interactions.
Figure 2The role of B7/CD28 and TNFR Superfamily co-stimulatory and co-inhibitory molecules in both DC: T-cell and T cell: tumor interactions. Modulation of ligand expression on DC will enable optimal T cell stimulation. The effect of DC ligands on T cell effector functions is shown for each ligand: receptor pair.
Dendritic cell, T cell and tumor-associated expression of B7/CD28 and TNFR superfamily ligands and receptors.
| CD80/86 | CTLA-4 (CD152) | • | • CTLA-4 expressed on DC has a negative regulatory role ( | |
| PD-L1 (CD274)PD-L2 (CD273) | PD-1 (CD279) | • | • PD-1 blockade prolongs DC survival ( | |
| ICOS-L (CD275) | ICOS (CD278) | • | • Controls CD40L dependent antibody class-switching ( | |
| Galectin-9 | Tim-3 (CD366) | • | • TIM-3 mediates uptake of necrotic antigens ( | |
| MHC Class II | LAG-3 (CD223) | • | • sLAG-3-Ig enhances DC maturation and migratory chemokines ( | |
| CD40 | CD40L | • | • Licensing of DC to produce IL12p70 ( | |
| CD70 | CD27 | • CD27 constitutively expressed constitutively by T cells. | • Important for T cell priming and memory responses ( | |
| OX40L (CD252) | OX40 (CD134) | • | • MEDI6469# | • OX40-dependent Treg depletion by myeloid cell Fc receptor dependent ADCC ( |
| 4-1BBL | 4-1BB (CD137) | • 4-1BB inducibly expressed on T cells ( | • 4-1BB has anti-tumor effects ( |
Properties of B7/CD28 and TNSRF pathways which augment DC vaccination directly in addition to re-invigorating T cells.