4.7 Article

Optimization of Whole Tumor Cell Vaccines by Interaction with Phagocytic Receptors

Journal

VACCINES
Volume 9, Issue 8, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/vaccines9080904

Keywords

cancer immunotherapy; therapeutic vaccine; tumor cell vaccine; photodynamic therapy-generated vaccine; phagocytic receptors; mouse SCCVII tumor

Funding

  1. Canadian Cancer Society [701132]

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The main function of whole-cell cancer vaccines is the ingestion of tumor antigen-containing material by the patient's antigen-presenting cells. Blocking specific phagocytic receptors may eliminate the therapeutic efficacy of the vaccine, while blocking certain inhibitory receptors could enhance tumor control by the vaccine. This study establishes a potential strategy for enhancing the therapeutic effects of PDT-generated (and possibly other) whole-cell tumor vaccines.
The principal event in the function of whole-cell cancer vaccines is the ingestion of vaccine-delivered tumor antigen-containing material, which is performed by the patient's antigen-presenting cells (APCs) through the employment of their phagocytic receptors. The goal of the present study was to identify the phagocytic receptors critical for the therapeutic efficacy of whole-cell cancer vaccines. The model of photodynamic therapy (PDT)-generated vaccines based on mouse SCCVII tumors was utilized, with in vitro expanded SCCVII cells treated by PDT serving as the vaccine material used for treating mice bearing established SCCVII tumors. The therapeutic impact, monitored as delayed progression of vaccinated tumors, was almost completely eliminated when antibodies specifically blocking the activity of LOX-1 scavenger receptor were administered to mice 30 min before vaccination. Similar, but much less pronounced, impacts were found with antibodies neutralizing the activity of CR3/CR4 receptors recognizing complement-opsonized vaccine cells, and with those blocking activating Fc gamma receptors that recognized IgG antibody-based opsonins. A strikingly contrary action, a greatly enhanced tumor control by the vaccine, was found by blocking immune inhibitory receptor, Fc gamma RIIB. The reported findings establish, therefore, an attractive strategy that can be effectively exploited for potent therapeutic enhancement of PDT-generated (and probably other) whole-cell tumor vaccines.

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