| Literature DB >> 34262904 |
Ahmed Salah1, Hao Wang1,2,3, Yanqin Li1, Meng Ji2, Wen-Bin Ou1, Nianmin Qi2,3, Yuehong Wu1.
Abstract
Dendritic cells (DCs) are efficient antigen-presenting cells (APCs) and potent activators of naïve T cells. Therefore, they act as a connective ring between innate and adaptive immunity. DC subsets are heterogeneous in their ontogeny and functions. They have proven to potentially take up and process tumor-associated antigens (TAAs). In this regard, researchers have developed strategies such as genetically engineered or TAA-pulsed DC vaccines; these manipulated DCs have shown significant outcomes in clinical and preclinical models. Here, we review DC classification and address how DCs are skewed into an immunosuppressive phenotype in cancer patients. Additionally, we present the advancements in DCs as a platform for cancer immunotherapy, emphasizing the technologies used for in vivo targeting of endogenous DCs, ex vivo generated vaccines from peripheral blood monocytes, and induced pluripotent stem cell-derived DCs (iPSC-DCs) to boost antitumoral immunity.Entities:
Keywords: cancer immunotherapy; cancer vaccines; dendritic cells; iPSC-DCs; induced pluripotent stem cells
Year: 2021 PMID: 34262904 PMCID: PMC8273339 DOI: 10.3389/fcell.2021.686544
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Cell Dev Biol ISSN: 2296-634X
FIGURE 1Antigen cross-presentation and T-cell priming. (A) Dendritic cell primes CD8+ T cells. Primed CD8+ cells are differentiated into cytotoxic T cells producing perforins and granzymes. (B) DC primes CD4+ T cells. Primed CD4+ cells are differentiated into T helper cells, which in turn activate B cells and differentiate them into memory cells and antibody-producing plasma cells.
Clinical trials utilizing DC vaccines in cancer immunotherapy.
| Intervention | Cancer type | Clinical response | References |
| Autologous DCs loaded with vaccinia-CEA-MUC-1-TRICOM (PANVAC-V) + autologous DCs loaded with fowl pox-CEA-MUC-1-TRICOM (PANVAC-F) | Resected hepatic or pulmonary metastases of colorectal carcinoma | 13 of 16 patients achieved 2 years of recurrence-free survival | |
| Sipuleucel-T | Prostate cancer | Median OS in treated patients is 25.8 months compared to 21.7 in placebo | |
| Autologous DCs loaded with TAAs | Melanoma | Out of 14 patients, 4 achieved PFS (12–35 months), 5 showed OS (22–40 months), and 4 achieved SD | |
| TriMixDC-MEL | Melanoma | -71% of the treated patients were alive and disease free vs. 35% of the control -The median time to non-salvageable disease recurrence in treated patients were higher than in control | |
| TriMixDC-MEL | Melanoma | -Out of 15 patients, 2 achieved CR, 4 achieved SD, and 7 showed PD -Five out of 15 patients achieved PFS (23.6–34 months) | |
| WT1 mRNA-electroporated DCs | Acute myeloid leukemia | -Six of 30 patients achieved CR 107.6 (months median duration), and 19 had a disease relapse -15 of these 19 had a salvage therapy, and 73.3% of them achieved a second CR | |
| Autologous DCs loaded with allogeneic non-small-cell lung cancer cells | Non-small-cell lung cancer | -20 of 32 patients were alive 5 years post vaccination -22 of 32 showed immunologic response within 6 months of vaccination | NCT00103116 |
| Peptide-pulsed DCs + indinavir | Ewing’s sarcoma and rhabdomyosarcoma | 43% of the treated patients achieved a 5-year OS, and 31% achieved a 5-year EFS | NCT00001566 |
| Adenovirus-p53-transduced DCs + 1-methyl-d-tryptophan | Breast cancer | 1 of 21 patients achieved complete response, 7 showed partial response, and 2 achieved stable disease | NCT01042535 |
| CEA mRNA-pulsed DCs | CEA-expressing cancer | 3 of 23 showed SD, 1 showed CR, and 18 showed PD | |
| Tumor mRNA-pulsed DCs | Brain cancer | 2 of 5 patients achieved SD, none showed PR, and 3 showed PD | |
| Peptide-loaded DCs + dasatinib administered at the same time | Metastatic melanoma | -Four of six patients had partial response, and 2 out of 6 had progressed disease -The calculated ORR in 6 participants is 0.6667 | NCT01876212 |
FIGURE 2A schematic diagram illustrates the production and mechanism of action of DCs. (A) Ex vivo generated DCs cross-present tumor antigens to T cells. (B) Antibodies transfer loaded TAAs to targeted DCs in vivo. MHC: major histocompatibility complex, TCR: T-cell receptor.