4.8 Article

Inflammasomes within Hyperactive Murine Dendritic Cells Stimulate Long-Lived T Cell-Mediated Anti-tumor Immunity

Journal

CELL REPORTS
Volume 33, Issue 7, Pages -

Publisher

CELL PRESS
DOI: 10.1016/j.celrep.2020.108381

Keywords

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Funding

  1. NIH [AI133524, AI093589, AI116550, P30DK34854, 1DP2GM119419, 1U54CA217377, 2RM1HG006193, AI121066, DK115217, AI201700100]
  2. Northwest Bio
  3. NIH T32 appointments [AI007245-34, AI00724535]
  4. Pew-Stewart Scholars Program for Cancer Research
  5. Sloan Fellowship in Chemistry
  6. MGH Transformative Scholar Award
  7. AAAAI Foundation Faculty Development Award
  8. Burroughs Wellcome Fund
  9. [K08AI121421]
  10. [T32HL116275]

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( )Central to anti-tumor immunity are dendritic cells (DCs), which stimulate long-lived protective T cell responses. Recent studies have demonstrated that DCs can achieve a state of hyperactivation, which is associated with inflammasome activities within living cells. Herein, we report that hyperactive DCs have an enhanced ability to migrate to draining lymph nodes and stimulate potent cytotoxic T lymphocyte (CTL) responses. This enhanced migratory activity is dependent on the chemokine receptor CCR7 and is associated with a unique transcriptional program that is not observed in conventionally activated or pyroptotic DCs. We show that hyperactivating stimuli are uniquely capable of inducing durable CTL-mediated anti-tumor immunity against tumors that are sensitive or resistant to PD-1 inhibition. These protective responses are intrinsic to the cDC1 subset of DCs, depend on the inflammasome-dependent cytokine IL-1 beta, and enable tumor lysates to serve as immunogens. If these activities are verified in humans, hyperactive DCs may impact immunotherapy.

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