| Literature DB >> 33050725 |
Sadia Zafar1, Saru Basnet1, Inga-Maria Launonen1, Dafne Carolina Alves Quixabeira1, Joao Santos1,2, Otto Hemminki1,3,4, Minna Malmstedt5, Victor Cervera-Carrascon1,2, Pasi Aronen6, Riikka Kalliokoski2, Riikka Havunen1,2, Antti Rannikko4, Tuomas Mirtti5, Mika Matikainen5, Anna Kanerva1,7, Akseli Hemminki1,2,8.
Abstract
Dendritic cell (DC)-based vaccines have shown some degree of success for the treatment of prostate cancer (PC). However, the highly immunosuppressive tumor microenvironment leads to DC dysfunction, which has limited the effectiveness of these vaccines. We hypothesized that use of a fully serotype 3 oncolytic adenovirus (Ad3-hTERT-CMV-hCD40L; TILT-234) could stimulate DCs in the prostate tumor microenvironment by expressing CD40L. Activated DCs would then activate cytotoxic T cells against the tumor, resulting in therapeutic immune responses. Oncolytic cell killing due to cancer cell-specific virus replication adds to antitumor effects but also enhances the immunological effect by releasing tumor epitopes for sampling by DC, in the presence of danger signals. In this study, we evaluated the companion effect of Ad3-hTERT-CMV-hCD40L and DC-therapy in a humanized mouse model and PC histocultures. Treatment with Ad3-hTERT-CMV-hCD40L and DC resulted in enhanced antitumor responses in vivo. Treatment of established histocultures with Ad3-hTERT-CMV-hCD40L induced DC maturation and notable increase in proinflammatory cytokines. In conclusion, Ad3-hTERT-CMV-hCD40L is able to modulate an immunosuppressive prostate tumor microenvironment and improve the effectiveness of DC vaccination in PC models and patient histocultures, setting the stage for clinical translation.Entities:
Keywords: CD40 ligand; adenovirus 3; dendritic cells (DCs); prostate cancer; tumor microenvironment
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Year: 2021 PMID: 33050725 DOI: 10.1089/hum.2020.222
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Hum Gene Ther ISSN: 1043-0342 Impact factor: 5.695