| Literature DB >> 35884895 |
Fernando Torres Andón1,2, Sergio Leon3, Aldo Ummarino4, Esther Redin3,5,6, Paola Allavena2,4, Diego Serrano3,6, Clément Anfray4, Alfonso Calvo3,5,6.
Abstract
Toll-like receptors (TLRs) are natural initial triggers of innate and adaptive immune responses. With the advent of cancer immunotherapy, nucleic acids engineered as ligands of endosomal TLRs have been investigated for the treatment of solid tumors. Despite promising results, their systemic administration, similarly to other immunotherapies, raises safety issues. To overcome these problems, recent studies have applied the direct injection of endosomal TLR agonists in the tumor and/or draining lymph nodes, achieving high local drug exposure and strong antitumor response. Importantly, intratumoral delivery of TLR agonists showed powerful effects not only against the injected tumors but also often against uninjected lesions (abscopal effects), resulting in some cases in cure and antitumoral immunological memory. Herein, we describe the structure and function of TLRs and their role in the tumor microenvironment. Then, we provide our vision on the potential of intratumor versus systemic delivery or vaccination approaches using TLR agonists, also considering the use of nanoparticles to improve their targeting properties. Finally, we collect the preclinical and clinical studies applying intratumoral injection of TLR agonists as monotherapies or in combination with: (a) other TLR or STING agonists; (b) other immunotherapies; (c) radiotherapy or chemotherapy; (d) targeted therapies.Entities:
Keywords: TLR agonists; antitumoral immunotherapy; intratumoral administration; toll-like receptors; tumor associated macrophages
Year: 2022 PMID: 35884895 PMCID: PMC9313389 DOI: 10.3390/biomedicines10071590
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Biomedicines ISSN: 2227-9059
Figure 1Schematic representation of endosomal TLR activation pathways. Upon ligation of endosomal TLRs, stimulation of myD88 or TRIF signaling results in the activation of co-stimulatory molecules, secretion of pro-inflammatory cytokines and Type I IFNs responses. Furthermore, combination treatment with TLR agonists triggers a synergistic induction of NF-kB, IRFs, or MAPKs pathways, leading to enhanced outcomes.
Figure 2Schematic representation of responses triggered by TLRag in cancer cells (mainly with a protumoral effect) versus immune cells (mainly with antitumoral immune responses). Many experimental studies have shown the activation of protumoral functions by TLR agonists on cancer cells, such as increasing their metabolism and proliferation, epithelial–mesenchymal/leucocytic transition, metastasis, and immunosuppression. On the other hand, TLR agonists activate antitumoral functions on immune cells, such as secretion of pro-inflammatory cytokines, Type I IFNs, increase in levels of perforins or granzyme B, as well as proliferation and recruitment of immune cells to fight against cancer cells.
Figure 3Pharmacological strategies for the activation of endosomal TLRs and combinations with other therapeutic approaches. TLRag alone or in combination have demonstrated the ability to reprogram TAMs towards M1-like antitumor macrophages. This pharmacological approach has been tested in preclinical and clinical studies with other immunotherapies, such as STING agonists, immune checkpoint inhibitors, or adoptive cell therapy. Other combinations include chemotherapy, oncolytic viruses, or radiotherapy, which can kill cancer cells and trigger immunostimulatory responses. Finally, some studies have used combinations with targeted therapy, epigenetic drugs, or metabolic reprogramming drugs.
Main endosomal TLR agonists, biological and antitumor effects, and examples of combinations of TLR-TLRag and TLR-STINGag.
| TLR | Ligand | Cancer and Model | Observations | References |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| TLR3 | Poly(I:C) | Syngeneic animal models and clinical trials | High antitumoral efficacy in several preclinical models; clinical trials were not successful | [ |
| Poly-ICLC (hiltonol®) | Syngeneic animal models and clinical trials | Pharmaceutical formulation is more stable than poly(I:C) and more effective but highly toxic | [ | |
| Poly(A:U) | B16.F10-OVA melanoma murine model | Antitumoral efficacy, activation of DCs, increase in CD8+ T cell infiltration, and decrease in IL-10-producing M2-like macrophages | [ | |
| TLR7/8 | R837 | FDA-approved for the treatment of basal cell carcinomas | Promotes apoptosis and cell-mediated antitumor immunity | [ |
| R848 | MC38 colon cancer and B16.F10 melanoma murine models, orthotopic model of NSCLC | Complete tumor regression, preventing tumor growth after re-challenge | [ | |
| Clinical trials in hematological neoplasias and solid tumors | Controversial results related to poor antitumoral activity and immunotoxic effects | [ | ||
| 1V199, 1V270 | B16cOVA murine model | Inhibition of tumor growth when low repeated doses were used | [ | |
| TLR9 | CpG | Syngeneic animal models and clinical trials | Activate pDCs and CTLs, enhancing T cell-mediated antitumor immunity; in clinical trials, short half-life in serum leading to low activation of NK cells and CTLs, and increase of pro-inflammatory cytokine production | [ |
| TLR3 + TLR7/8 | Poly(I:C) + R848 | Lung adenocarcinoma and fibrosarcoma murine models | Antitumoral activity mainly driven by macrophage reprogramming, which promoted the activation of innate and adaptive immune responses against the cancer cells | [ |
| Lymphoma murine models | Profound antitumor effects in the context of peptide vaccination | [ | ||
| Poly(I:C) + R837 | B16.F10(OVA) melanoma murine model | Synergistic activation of antitumor immune responses and direct killing of cancer cells in established tumors | [ | |
| TLR3 + TLR9 | Poly(I:C) + CpG | Murine glioma model | Inhibition of tumor growth and improved median survival, by activation of an antitumor phenotype of microglia | [ |
| TLR7/8 + TLR9 | 3M-052 + CpG | Colon carcinoma murine model | Upregulation of Th1 cytokine-expression, reduction in the number of tumor resident MDSCs, increasing in the accumulation of NK cells and CD8+ T lymphocytes, leading to strong and long-lasting antitumoral immune responses | [ |
| TLR4 + TLR7/8 | HMGB1 + R848 | CT26 murine tumor model | Increased the infiltration of T cells and activation and homing of tumor-infiltrating DCs to the draining lymph node, eradication of large established tumors and resistance to re-challenge | [ |
| TLR2/6 + TLR 7/8 | Pam2CSK4C + azide | B16.F10 melanoma murine model | CD8+ T cell and NK cell antitumor responses, inhibits tumor growth and reduced adverse effects | [ |
| TLRs + STING agonists | CpG | EG-7 and B16 F10 murine tumor models | Synergistic activation of NK cells, resulting in high production of IFN-γ and activation of CD8+ T cell response in vivo | [ |
| Poly(I:C)-nanocomplex | Colon cancer and melanoma murine models | Strong antitumoral activity and abscopal effect, while none of the single drugs showed such an activity | [ |