4.7 Article

Spatiotemporal depletion of tumor-associated immune checkpoint PD-L1 with near-infrared photoimmunotherapy promotes antitumor immunity

期刊

出版社

BMJ PUBLISHING GROUP
DOI: 10.1136/jitc-2021-003036

关键词

antibodies; neoplasm; B7-H1 antigen; immunotherapy; tumor microenvironment; therapies; investigational

资金

  1. Program for Developing Next-generation Researchers (Japan Science and Technology Agency)
  2. JSPS KAKENHI [18K15923, 21K07217]
  3. CREST
  4. AMED Seeds A at Nagoya University
  5. Uehara Memorial Foundation
  6. Yasuda Memorial Medical Foundation
  7. Mochida Memorial Foundation for Medical and Pharmaceutical Research
  8. Takeda Science Foundation
  9. Takahashi Industrial and Economic Research Foundation
  10. AICHI Health Promotion Foundation
  11. Princess Takamatsu Cancer Research Fund
  12. FOREST-Souhatsu (JST)
  13. Grants-in-Aid for Scientific Research [21K07217, 18K15923] Funding Source: KAKEN

向作者/读者索取更多资源

The study modified photoimmunotherapy by targeting PD-L1 to enhance anticancer immune system. The therapy showed limited effect on tumor cells in vitro but induced sufficient antitumor effects in vivo, mediated by the 'photoimmuno' effect and antitumor immunity augmentation. The local PD-L1-targeted NIR-PIT enhanced the antitumor immune reaction through direct photonecrotic effect, providing an alternative approach to targeted cancer immunotherapy.
Background Near-infrared photoimmunotherapy (NIR-PIT) is a new modality for treating cancer, which uses antibody-photoabsorber (IRDye700DX) conjugates that specifically bind to target tumor cells. This conjugate is then photoactivated by NIR light, inducing rapid necrotic cell death. NIR-PIT needs a highly expressed targeting antigen on the cells because of its reliance on antibodies. However, using antibodies limits this useful technology to only those patients whose tumors express high levels of a specific antigen. Thus, to propose an alternative strategy, we modified this phototechnology to augment the anticancer immune system by targeting the almost low-expressed immune checkpoint molecules on tumor cells. Methods We used programmed death-ligand 1 (PD-L1), an immune checkpoint molecule, as the target for NIR-PIT. Although the expression of PD-L1 on tumor cells is usually low, PD-L1 is almost expressed on tumor cells. Intratumoral depletion with PD-L1-targeted NIR-PIT was tested in mouse syngeneic tumor models. Results Although PD-L1-targeted NIR-PIT showed limited effect on tumor cells in vitro, the therapy induced sufficient antitumor effects in vivo, which were thought to be mediated by the 'photoimmuno' effect and antitumor immunity augmentation. Moreover, PD-L1-targeted NIR-PIT induced antitumor effect on non-NIR light-irradiated tumors. Conclusions Local PD-L1-targeted NIR-PIT enhanced the antitumor immune reaction through a direct photonecrotic effect, thereby providing an alternative approach to targeted cancer immunotherapy and expanding the scope of cancer therapeutics.

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