Artificial Mini Dendritic Cells Boost T Cell–Based Immunotherapy for Ovarian Cancer

Shanshan Cheng(Renji Hospital), Cong Xu(Renji Hospital), Yue Jin(Renji Hospital), Li Yu(Renji Hospital), Cheng Zhong(Renji Hospital), Jun Ma(Renji Hospital), Jiani Yang(Renji Hospital), Nan Zhang(Renji Hospital), Yuan Li(Renji Hospital), Chao Wang(Renji Hospital), Zhiyou Yang(Renji Hospital), Yu Wang(Renji Hospital)
Advanced Science
February 5, 2020
Cited by 151Open Access
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Abstract

Ovarian cancer is the most lethal gynecological malignancy with high recurrence rates and low survival rates, remaining a disease of high unmet need. Cancer immunotherapy, which harnesses the potential of the immune system to attack tumors, has emerged as one of the most promising treatment options in recent years. As an important form of immunotherapy, dendritic cell (DC)-based vaccines have demonstrated the ability to induce an immune response, while clinical efficacy of DC vaccines remains unsubstantiated as long-term benefit is only reported in a restricted proportion of patients. Here, a biomimetic nanovaccine derived from DCs is developed through cell membrane coating nanotechnology. This nanovaccine, denoted "mini DC," inherits the ability of antigen presentation and T cells' stimulation from DCs and is shown to elicit enhanced activation of T cells both in vitro and in vivo. In a mouse model of ovarian cancer, mini DCs exhibit superior therapeutic and prophylactic efficacy against cancer including delayed tumor growth and reduced tumor metastasis compared with DC vaccine. These findings suggest that mini DCs may serve as a facile and potent vaccine to boost anticancer immunotherapy.


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