Intratumoral peptide injection enhances tumor cell antigenicity recognized by cytotoxic T lymphocytes: a potential option for improvement in antigen-specific cancer immunotherapy

被引:0
作者
Daisuke Nobuoka
Toshiaki Yoshikawa
Mari Takahashi
Tatsuaki Iwama
Kazutaka Horie
Manami Shimomura
Shiro Suzuki
Noriko Sakemura
Munehide Nakatsugawa
Hiroshi Sadamori
Takahito Yagi
Toshiyoshi Fujiwara
Tetsuya Nakatsura
机构
[1] National Cancer Center Hospital East,Division of Cancer Immunotherapy, Research Center for Innovative Oncology
[2] Okayama University Graduate School of Medicine,Department of Gastroenterological Surgery
[3] Dentistry,undefined
[4] and Pharmaceutical Sciences,undefined
来源
Cancer Immunology, Immunotherapy | 2013年 / 62卷
关键词
Intratumoral peptide injection; Antigen; Immunotherapy; Cytotoxic T lymphocyte;
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学科分类号
摘要
Antigen-specific cancer immunotherapy is a promising strategy for improving cancer treatment. Recently, many tumor-associated antigens and their epitopes recognized by cytotoxic T lymphocytes (CTLs) have been identified. However, the density of endogenously presented antigen-derived peptides on tumor cells is generally sparse, resulting in the inability of antigen-specific CTLs to work effectively. We hypothesize that increasing the density of an antigen-derived peptide would enhance antigen-specific cancer immunotherapy. Here, we demonstrated that intratumoral peptide injection leads to additional peptide loading onto major histocompatibility complex class I molecules of tumor cells, enhancing tumor cell recognition by antigen-specific CTLs. In in vitro studies, human leukocyte antigen (HLA)-A*02:01-restricted glypican-3144–152 (FVGEFFTDV) and cytomegalovirus495–503 (NLVPMVATV) peptide-specific CTLs showed strong activity against all peptide-pulsed cell lines, regardless of whether the tumor cells expressed the antigen. In in vivo studies using immunodeficient mice, glypican-3144–152 and cytomegalovirus495–503 peptides injected into a solid mass were loaded onto HLA class I molecules of tumor cells. In a peptide vaccine model and an adoptive cell transfer model using C57BL/6 mice, intratumoral injection of ovalbumin257–264 peptide (SIINFEKL) was effective for tumor growth inhibition and survival against ovalbumin-negative tumors without adverse reactions. Moreover, we demonstrated an antigen-spreading effect that occurred after intratumoral peptide injection. Intratumoral peptide injection enhances tumor cell antigenicity and may be a useful option for improvement in antigen-specific cancer immunotherapy against solid tumors.
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页码:639 / 652
页数:13
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