Adeno-associated virus delivered CXCL9 sensitizes glioblastoma to anti-PD-1 immune checkpoint blockade

Christina A. Von Roemeling(University of Florida), Jeet A. Patel(University of Florida), Savannah Carpenter(University of Florida), Oleg Yegorov(University of Florida), Changlin Yang(University of Florida), A. Bhatia(University of Florida), Bently P. Doonan(University of Florida Health), Rylynn A. Russell(University of Florida), Vrunda Trivedi(University of Florida), Kelena Klippel(University of Florida), Daniel Ryu(Emory University), Adam Grippin(The University of Texas MD Anderson Cancer Center), Hunter S. Futch(Emory University), Yong Ran(Emory University), Lan Hoang-Minh(University of Florida), Frances Weidert(University of Florida), Todd E. Golde(Emory University), Duane A. Mitchell(University of Florida)
Nature Communications
July 12, 2024
Cited by 20Open Access
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Abstract

There are numerous mechanisms by which glioblastoma cells evade immunological detection, underscoring the need for strategic combinatorial treatments to achieve appreciable therapeutic effects. However, developing combination therapies is difficult due to dose-limiting toxicities, blood-brain-barrier, and suppressive tumor microenvironment. Glioblastoma is notoriously devoid of lymphocytes driven in part by a paucity of lymphocyte trafficking factors necessary to prompt their recruitment and activation. Herein, we develop a recombinant adeno-associated virus (AAV) gene therapy that enables focal and stable reconstitution of the tumor microenvironment with C-X-C motif ligand 9 (CXCL9), a powerful call-and-receive chemokine for lymphocytes. By manipulating local chemokine directional guidance, AAV-CXCL9 increases tumor infiltration by cytotoxic lymphocytes, sensitizing glioblastoma to anti-PD-1 immune checkpoint blockade in female preclinical tumor models. These effects are accompanied by immunologic signatures evocative of an inflamed tumor microenvironment. These findings support AAV gene therapy as an adjuvant for reconditioning glioblastoma immunogenicity given its safety profile, tropism, modularity, and off-the-shelf capability.


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