IL-2/anti-IL-2 antibody complexes augment immune responses to therapeutic cancer vaccines.

Autor: Sobral, Miguel C., Cabizzosu, Laura, Kang, Shawn J., Ruark, Kyle, Najibi, Alex J., Lane, Ryan S., Vitner, Einat, Ijaz, Hamza, Dellacherie, Maxence O., Dacus, Mason T., Tringides, Christina M., de Lázaro, Irene, Pittet, Mikaël J., Müller, Sören, Turley, Shannon J., Mooney, David J.
Předmět:
Zdroj: Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America; 11/26/2024, Vol. 121 Issue 48, p1-11, 32p
Abstrakt: One driver of the high failure rates of clinical trials for therapeutic cancer vaccines is likely the inability to sufficiently engage conventional dendritic cells (cDCs), the antigen-presenting cell (APC) subset that is specialized in priming antitumor T cells. Here, we demonstrate that, relative to vaccination with an injectable mesoporous silica rod (MPS) vaccine alone (Vax), combining MPS vaccines with CD122-biased IL-2/anti-IL-2 antibody complexes (IL-2cx) drives ~3-fold expansion of cDCs at the vaccination sites, vaccine-draining lymph nodes, and spleens of treated mice. Furthermore, relative to Vax alone, Vax+IL-2cx led to a ~3-fold increase in the numbers of CD8+ T cells and ~15-fold increase in the numbers of NK cells at the vaccination site. Notably, with both the model protein antigen OVA as well as various peptide neoantigens, Vax+IL-2cx induced ~5 to 30-fold greater numbers of circulating antigen-specific CD8+ T cells relative to Vax alone. We further demonstrate that Vax+IL-2cx leads to significantly improved efficacy in the MC38 colon carcinoma model relative to either monotherapy alone, driving complete regressions in 50% of mice in a cDC-dependent manner. Relative to vaccine alone, Vax+IL-2cx led to comparable numbers of CD8+ T cells, but markedly greater numbers of NK cells and activated cDCs in the B16F10 melanoma tumor microenvironment post-therapy. Taken together, these findings suggest that the administration of factors that engage both the cDC-CD8+ T cell and cDC-NK cell axes can boost the potency of therapeutic cancer vaccines. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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