4.7 Article

Engineering monocyte-derived dendritic cells to secrete interferon-α enhances their ability to promote adaptive and innate anti-tumor immune effector functions

Journal

CANCER IMMUNOLOGY IMMUNOTHERAPY
Volume 64, Issue 7, Pages 831-842

Publisher

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s00262-015-1688-2

Keywords

Dendritic cells; Cytotoxic T cells; Natural killer cells; Interferon-alpha; mRNA electroporation; Cancer immunotherapy

Funding

  1. Dutch Cancer Society (KWF) [2009-4402]
  2. Research Foundation-Flanders (FWO)
  3. Foundation against Cancer (STK)
  4. Methusalem program of the Flemish Government
  5. FWO postdoctoral fellowship
  6. Belgian Hematological Society
  7. Emmanuel van der Schueren grant from the Flemish League against Cancer (VLK)

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Dendritic cell (DC) vaccination has demonstrated potential in clinical trials as a new effective cancer treatment, but objective and durable clinical responses are confined to a minority of patients. Interferon (IFN)-alpha, a type-I IFN, can bolster anti-tumor immunity by restoring or increasing the function of DCs, T cells and natural killer (NK) cells. Moreover, type-I IFN signaling on DCs was found to be essential in mice for tumor rejection by the innate and adaptive immune system. Targeted delivery of IFN-alpha by DCs to immune cells could boost the generation of anti-tumor immunity, while avoiding the side effects frequently associated with systemic administration. Naturally circulating plasmacytoid DCs, major producers of type-I IFN, were already shown capable of inducing tumor antigen-specific T cell responses in cancer patients without severe toxicity, but their limited number complicates their use in cancer vaccination. In the present work, we hypothesized that engineering easily generated human monocyte-derived mature DCs to secrete IFN-alpha using mRNA electroporation enhances their ability to promote adaptive and innate anti-tumor immunity. Our results show that IFN-alpha mRNA electroporation of DCs significantly increases the stimulation of tumor antigen-specific cytotoxic T cell as well as anti-tumor NK cell effector functions in vitro through high levels of IFN-alpha secretion. Altogether, our findings mark IFN-alpha mRNA-electroporated DCs as potent inducers of both adaptive and innate anti-tumor immunity and pave the way for clinical trial evaluation in cancer patients.

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