4.6 Article

A Therapeutic Vaccine in Combination with Cyclic GMP-AMP Cures More Differentiated Melanomas in Mice

Journal

JOURNAL OF IMMUNOLOGY
Volume 210, Issue 9, Pages 1428-1436

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AMER ASSOC IMMUNOLOGISTS
DOI: 10.4049/jimmunol.2200371

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TheraVac vaccine can cure multiple large tumors but not melanoma. Addition of cGAMP synergizes with TheraVac to activate DCs and enhance immune response. Treatment with cGAMP and TheraVac eradicates 60-80% of melanoma tumors and provides long-term protective immunity.
We have identified a combinational immunotherapy termed TheraVac vaccine (TheraVac) that can cure multiple large established mouse tumors, but it failed to cure melanoma in mice. TheraVac consists of an immunostimulating arm containing an agonist (HMGN1 [N1]) for TLR4 and an agonist (R848) for TLR7/8 that synergize to activate tumor-infiltrating dendritic cells (DCs) and promote Th1 immune responses. The second arm uses an immune checkpoint blockade, anti-PDL-1, to diminish tumor-associated immunosuppression. In this study, we investigated supplementation of TheraVac by a stimulator of IFN genes (STING) agonist, cyclic GMP-AMP (cGAMP), because together they synergize in activating DCs and produced more immunostimulating IL-12p70 and TNF-a cytokines. The synergistic activation and maturation of DCs is dependent on the activation of tank binding kinase-1 (TBK1). Treatment of three different melaninproducing mouse melanomas (B16F1, M3, and M4) with intratumoral delivery of cGAMP and TheraVac eradicated 60-80% of these melanomas. Immunoprofiling of M3 tumor treated with TheraVac plus cGAMP showed an increase in CD8+ CTLs and macrophages in the tumor. There was also a marked increase of CD4, CD8 effector and memory T cells and generation of functional tumor-specific CTLs in tumor-draining lymph nodes. The resultant tumor-free mice were selectively resistant to subsequent challenge with the same tumors, indicating long-term tumor-specific protective immunity. Overall, our findings have important implications for clinical trials with a combination of these immunotherapeutics to cure melanin-producing human melanomas, without the need for exogenous tumor Ags and no clear toxic effects in mice. The Journal of Immunology, 2023, 210: 1428-1436.

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