| Literature DB >> 31262361 |
Louise M E Müller1, Matthew Holmes1, Joanne L Michael1, Gina B Scott1, Emma J West1, Karen J Scott1, Christopher Parrish2, Kathryn Hall1, Sina Stäble1, Victoria A Jennings3, Matthew Cullen4, Stewart McConnell2, Catherine Langton2, Emma L Tidswell1, Darren Shafren5, Adel Samson1, Kevin J Harrington3, Hardev Pandha6, Christy Ralph1, Richard J Kelly2, Gordon Cook7, Alan A Melcher3, Fiona Errington-Mais8.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: The oncolytic virus, coxsackievirus A21 (CVA21), has shown promise as a single agent in several clinical trials and is now being tested in combination with immune checkpoint blockade. Combination therapies offer the best chance of disease control; however, the design of successful combination strategies requires a deeper understanding of the mechanisms underpinning CVA21 efficacy, in particular, the role of CVA21 anti-tumor immunity. Therefore, this study aimed to examine the ability of CVA21 to induce human anti-tumor immunity, and identify the cellular mechanism responsible.Entities:
Keywords: Adaptive immunity; Coxsackievirus A21; Innate immunity; Oncolytic viruses; Plasmacytoid DC
Year: 2019 PMID: 31262361 PMCID: PMC6604201 DOI: 10.1186/s40425-019-0632-y
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Immunother Cancer ISSN: 2051-1426 Impact factor: 13.751
Fig. 1Intravenous CVA21 induces a type I IFN response and activates immune effector cells in vivo. a. As part of the STORM clinical trial, patients (n = 5) with advanced malignancies were administered with 1 × 108 (red symbols) or 1 × 109 TCID50 (black symbols) clinical grade CVA21 i.v. b. CVA21 was infused on day 1, 3 and 5 and blood samples were taken pre-infusion (a), 1 h (b), 3 days (c) and 22 days (d) after the first infusion. c. cDNA was made from PBMC collected pre-infusion (a) and on day 3 (c) and the expression of IFIT1, IFI44L and OAS1 was measured by qPCR. Results were normalized to 18S RNA expression and the fold increase in expression (calculated as ΔΔCt) compared to pre-infusion is presented. d-f CD69 expression on NK cells (d), CD4+ T cells (e) and CD8+ T cells (f) was analyzed at each time point. *denotes statistical significance
Fig. 2CVA21 treatment induces cytokine-mediated bystander killing of CVA21-resistant cells. a. Conditioned-media (CM) was collected from healthy donor PBMC after 48 h (±CVA21 treatment; 1 pfu/PBMC) and analyzed for cytokines using a 48-plex multiplex assay. The mean fold change (n = 3) compared to untreated PBMCs is shown. Sample readings outside of the detection range were estimated using the assay range limits and are indicated by x. b. CVA21-resistant cell lines were cultured for 96 h in PBMC-CM (0, 0.1 and 1 pfu/cell CVA21 treatment for 48 h; n = 6 for KG-1, HL-60 and OPM2, n = 5 for kasumi-1) and cell viability was assessed using an MTS assay. Error bars indicate SEM. *denotes statistical significance
Fig. 3CVA21 treatment enhances NK cell activation and function. a. CD69 expression on healthy donor NK cells (CD3−CD56+) following CVA21 treatment for 48 h (n = 4). b. Healthy donor PBMC (± 0.1 pfu/cell CVA21) were co-cultured at a 2:1 ratio with AML or MM target cells for 5 h and the percentage of NK cells expressing CD107a/b was determined (n = 4); data for CVA21-sensitive (right) and CVA21-resistant (left) cell lines are shown. c. CVA21-sensitive (right) and CVA21-resistant (left) cell lines were labelled with 51Cr and then co-cultured with healthy donor PBMC (±CVA21 treatment) for 4 h and the percentage lysis of target cells was determined (n = 4). Error bars indicate SEM. *denotes statistical significance
Fig. 4CVA21 can prime tumor-specific CTL. a. and b: CVA21-sensitive U266B MM (a) and ICAM-1/KG-1 (b) cell targets were used. Tumor cells were pre-treated with CVA21 (0.1 pfu/cell) for 24 h, then loaded onto mDC prior to being co-cultured with autologous PBMC and one round of re-stimulation. a. and bi. CTLs primed in the presence or absence of CVA21 were co-cultured with 51Cr-labelled relevant targets (U266B and ICAM-1/KG-1 cells, respectively) at different effector:target ratios for 4 h. The percent cell lysis was determined using 51Cr release (n = 6). a. and bii. CTL intracellular IFN-γ production following a 5 h co-culture with relevant (U266B or ICAM-1/KG-1, respectively) or irrelevant (ICAM-1/KG-1 or Raji, respectively) targets (n = 3). a. and biii. Intracellular IFN-γ production following a 5 h co-culture with autologous CD14+ cells loaded with appropriate peptide pools (Mucin-1 and MAGE-A1; U266B CTLs, and PRAME; ICAM-1/KG-1 primed CTLs). c. CTL priming with CVA21-resistant cells (parental-KG-1 (i) and THP-1 (ii)). The percentage of tumor specific CTLs (CD3+CD8+) was determined using CD107a/b degranulation after a 5 h co-culture with relevant (KG-1; n = 3 or THP-1; n = 2) or irrelevant (Raji) cell targets. Spontaneous CD107 expression was subtracted from the values shown. Error bars indicate SEM. *denotes statistical significance
Fig. 5mDC are not necessary for priming of AML-specific CTL. a. mDC were treated with CVA21 or CVA21-treated ICAM-1/KG-1 cells for 48 h and expression of the activation markers, CD86, CD80 or HLA-DR, was examined (n = 4). b. ICAM-1/KG1-specific CTLs were primed with or without autologous mDC (±CVA21) and CTL-mediated lysis of relevant ICAM-1/KG-1 targets was measured by 51Cr release assay. Solid lines indicate CTL primed in the presence of mDC, dashed lines indicate CTL primed in the absence of mDC (n = 3). c. ICAM-1/KG1 CTLs, primed in the absence of mDC, were co-cultured with relevant (ICAM-1/KG-1) or irrelevant (Raji) target cells (n = 3) for 5 h and tumor specificity was examined using CD107a/b degranulation. Error bars indicate SEM. *denotes statistical significance
Fig. 6Type I IFN and ICAM-1 are required for CVA21-induced anti-tumor immunity. a-d. HD-PBMC were treated with CVA21 for 24 h, with or without pre-treatment with type-1 IFN blockade or an ICAM-1-blocking antibody. NK cell CD69 expression (a) and NK cell CD107a/b degranulation (b) were measured in the presence of type I IFN blocking antibodies or corresponding isotype antibodies (n = 4). c. HD-PBMC were treated with CVA21, in the presence or absence of ICAM-1-blocking antibodies, and IFN-α secretion was examined by ELISA (n = 3). d. NK cell CD69 expression was determined following CVA21treatment, with or without pre-treatment with an ICAM-1-blocking antibody or isotype control (n = 3). e. ICAM-1 expression was measured on mature hematopoietic immune cells (CD45+) from primary AML patients (n = 14). f. Correlation of CVA21 response (death of AML blasts) with ICAM-1 expression on mature CD45+ hematopoietic cells from primary AML samples. Error bars indicate SEM. *denotes statistical significance
Fig. 7pDC orchestrate innate and adaptive CVA21 anti-tumor immunity. a. ICAM-1 expression on immune cell components from healthy donors (n = 3). b-e CD14+ monocytes and pDC (CD123+BDCA-2+) were depleted from whole PBMC (W.PBMC) prior to analysis. b. IFN-α secretion from whole or depleted PBMC, or isolated CD14+ cells and pDC, was measured by ELISA 48 h post-CVA21 treatment. c. CM was generated from whole or depleted PBMC, following treatment with 0.1 pfu/PBMC CVA21 for 48 h. The cytotoxicity of CM against kasumi-1 (i) and HL-60 (ii) cells after 96 h was evaluated by MTS assay. d. NK cell CD69 expression (i) and NK cell CD107a/b degranulation (ii) after treatment of whole of depleted PBMC with 0.1pfu/cell CVA21 for 48 h was determined. e. ICAM/KG-1 cells (±CVA21 and without addition of mDC) were used to prime CTL and PBMCs depleted of CD14+ monocytes or pDC were used as effector cells. Tumor-specific CTLs were detected using CD107a/b degranulation assays against cell targets. Error bars indicate SEM. *denotes statistical significance. n.s. = not significant