Author:
Brackett Craig M.,Kojouharov Bojidar,Veith Jean,Greene Kellee F.,Burdelya Lyudmila G.,Gollnick Sandra O.,Abrams Scott I.,Gudkov Andrei V.
Abstract
Activation of an anticancer innate immune response is highly desirable because of its inherent ability to generate an adaptive antitumor T-cell response. However, insufficient safety of innate immune modulators limits clinical use to topical applications. Toll-like receptor 5 (TLR5) agonists are favorably positioned as potential systemic immunotherapeutic agents because of unusual tissue specificity of expression, uniquely safe profile of induced cytokines, and antitumor efficacy demonstrated in a number of animal models. Here, we decipher the molecular and cellular events underlying the metastasis suppressive activity of entolimod, a clinical stage TLR5 agonist that activates NF-κB–, AP-1–, and STAT3–driven immunomodulatory signaling pathways specifically within the liver. Used as a single agent in murine colon and mammary metastatic cancer models, entolimod rapidly induces CXCL9 and -10 that support homing of blood-borne CXCR3-expressing NK cells to the liver predominantly through an IFN-γ signaling independent mechanism. NK cell-dependent activation of dendritic cells is followed by stimulation of a CD8+ T-cell response, which exert both antimetastatic effect of entolimod and establishment of tumor-specific and durable immune memory. These results define systemically administered TLR5 agonists as organ-specific immunoadjuvants, enabling efficient antitumor vaccination that does not depend on identification of tumor-specific antigens.
Funder
U.S. Department of Defense
HHS | NIH | National Institute of General Medical Sciences
HHS | NIH | National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases
HHS | NIH | National Cancer Institute
Publisher
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences
Cited by
85 articles.
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