cDC1 Vaccines Drive Tumor Rejection by Direct Presentation Independently of Host cDC1

Author:

Ferris Stephen T.1ORCID,Ohara Ray A.1ORCID,Ou Feiya1ORCID,Wu Renee1ORCID,Huang Xiao1ORCID,Kim Sunkyung1ORCID,Chen Jing1ORCID,Liu Tian-Tian1ORCID,Schreiber Robert D.123ORCID,Murphy Theresa L.1ORCID,Murphy Kenneth M.1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. 1Department of Pathology and Immunology, Washington University in St. Louis, School of Medicine, St. Louis, Missouri.

2. 2The Andrew M. and Jane M. Bursky Center for Human Immunology and Immunotherapy Programs, Washington University School of Medicine, St Louis, Missouri.

3. 3Parker Institute for Cancer Immunotherapy, San Francisco, California.

Abstract

Abstract As a cell-based cancer vaccine, dendritic cells (DC), derived from peripheral blood monocytes or bone marrow (BM) treated with GM-CSF (GMDC), were initially thought to induce antitumor immunity by presenting tumor antigens directly to host T cells. Subsequent work revealed that GMDCs do not directly prime tumor-specific T cells, but must transfer their antigens to host DCs. This reduces their advantage over strictly antigen-based strategies proposed as cancer vaccines. Type 1 conventional DCs (cDC1) have been reported to be superior to GMDCs as a cancer vaccine, but whether they act by transferring antigens to host DCs is unknown. To test this, we compared antitumor responses induced by GMDCs and cDC1 in Irf8 +32–/– mice, which lack endogenous cDC1 and cannot reject immunogenic fibrosarcomas. Both GMDCs and cDC1 could cross-present cell-associated antigens to CD8+ T cells in vitro. However, injection of GMDCs into tumors in Irf8 +32–/– mice did not induce antitumor immunity, consistent with their reported dependence on host cDC1. In contrast, injection of cDC1s into tumors in Irf8 +32–/– mice resulted in their migration to tumor-draining lymph nodes, activation of tumor-specific CD8+ T cells, and rejection of the tumors. Tumor rejection did not require the in vitro loading of cDC1 with antigens, indicating that acquisition of antigens in vivo is sufficient to induce antitumor responses. Finally, cDC1 vaccination showed abscopal effects, with rejection of untreated tumors growing concurrently on the opposite flank. These results suggest that cDC1 may be a useful future avenue to explore for antitumor therapy. See related Spotlight by Hubert et al., p. 918

Funder

NIH

Publisher

American Association for Cancer Research (AACR)

Subject

Cancer Research,Immunology

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