Author:
Mendez-Gomez Hector R.,DeVries Anna,Castillo Paul,Stover Brian D.,Qdaisat Sadeem,Von Roemeling Christina,Ogando-Rivas Elizabeth,Weidert Frances,McGuiness James,Zhang Dingpeng,Chung Michael C.,Li Derek,Zhang Chong,Marconi Christiano,Campaneria Yodarlynis,Chardon-Robles Jonathan,Grippin Adam,Karachi Aida,Thomas Nagheme,Huang Jianping,Milner Rowan,Sahay Bikash,Sawyer W. Gregory,Ligon John A.,Silver Natalie,Simon Eugenio,Cleaver Brian,Wynne Kristine,Hodik Marcia,Molinaro Anette,Guan Juan,Kellish Patrick,Doty Andria,Lee Ji-Hyun,Carrera-Justiz Sheila,Rahman Maryam,Gatica Sebastian,Mueller Sabine,Prados Michael,Ghiaseddin Ashley,Mitchell Duane A.,Sayour Elias J.
Abstract
AbstractMessenger RNA (mRNA) has emerged as a remarkable tool for COVID-19 prevention but its use for induction of therapeutic cancer immunotherapy remains limited by poor antigenicity and a regulatory tumor microenvironment (TME). Herein, we develop a facile approach for substantially enhancing immunogenicity of tumor-derived mRNA in lipid-particle (LP) delivery systems. By using mRNA as a molecular bridge with ultrapure liposomes and foregoing helper lipids, we promote the formation of ‘onion-like’ multi-lamellar RNA-LP aggregates (LPA). Intravenous administration of RNA-LPAs mimics infectious emboli and elicits massive DC/T cell mobilization into lymphoid tissues provoking cancer immunogenicity and mediating rejection of both early and late-stage murine tumor models. Unlike current mRNA vaccine designs that rely on payload packaging into nanoparticle cores for toll-like receptor engagement, RNA-LPAs stimulate intracellular pathogen recognition receptors (RIG-I) and reprogram the TME thus enabling therapeutic T cell activity. RNA-LPAs were safe in acute/chronic murine GLP toxicology studies and immunologically active in client-owned canines with terminal gliomas. In an early phase first-in-human trial for patients with glioblastoma, we show that RNA-LPAs encoding for tumor-associated antigens elicit rapid induction of pro-inflammatory cytokines, mobilization/activation of monocytes and lymphocytes, and expansion of antigen-specific T cell immunity. These data support the use of RNA-LPAs as novel tools to elicit and sustain immune responses against poorly immunogenic tumors.
Publisher
Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory
Cited by
2 articles.
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