Cytokine-armed dendritic cell progenitors for antigen-agnostic cancer immunotherapy

Ali Ghasemi(Swiss Cancer Center Léman), Amaia Martínez-Usatorre(Swiss Cancer Center Léman), Luqing Li(Swiss Cancer Center Léman), Mehdi Hicham(Swiss Cancer Center Léman), Alan Guichard(Swiss Cancer Center Léman), Rachel Marcone(SIB Swiss Institute of Bioinformatics), Nadine Fournier(SIB Swiss Institute of Bioinformatics), Bruno Torchia(Swiss Cancer Center Léman), Darel Martinez Bedoya(University of Geneva), Suzel Davanture(University of Geneva), Mirian Fernández-Vaquero(German Cancer Research Center), Chaofan Fan(German Cancer Research Center), Jakob Janzen(German Cancer Research Center), Yahya Mohammadzadeh(Swiss Cancer Center Léman), Raphaël Genolet(Ludwig Cancer Research), Nahal Mansouri(Swiss Cancer Center Léman), Mathias Wenes(University of Geneva), Denis Migliorini(University of Geneva), Mathias Heikenwälder(German Cancer Research Center), Michele De Palma(Swiss Cancer Center Léman)
Nature Cancer
November 23, 2023
Cited by 75Open Access
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Abstract

Abstract Dendritic cells (DCs) are antigen-presenting myeloid cells that regulate T cell activation, trafficking and function. Monocyte-derived DCs pulsed with tumor antigens have been tested extensively for therapeutic vaccination in cancer, with mixed clinical results. Here, we present a cell-therapy platform based on mouse or human DC progenitors (DCPs) engineered to produce two immunostimulatory cytokines, IL-12 and FLT3L. Cytokine-armed DCPs differentiated into conventional type-I DCs (cDC1) and suppressed tumor growth, including melanoma and autochthonous liver models, without the need for antigen loading or myeloablative host conditioning. Tumor response involved synergy between IL-12 and FLT3L and was associated with natural killer and T cell infiltration and activation, M1-like macrophage programming and ischemic tumor necrosis. Antitumor immunity was dependent on endogenous cDC1 expansion and interferon-γ signaling but did not require CD8 + T cell cytotoxicity. Cytokine-armed DCPs synergized effectively with anti-GD2 chimeric-antigen receptor (CAR) T cells in eradicating intracranial gliomas in mice, illustrating their potential in combination therapies.


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