28 research outputs found
Cold-Inducible RNA Binding Protein as a Vaccination Platform to Enhance Immunotherapeutic Responses against Hepatocellular Carcinoma
Therapies based on immune checkpoint inhibitors (ICPI) have yielded promising albeit
limited results in patients with hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC). Vaccines have been proposed as
combination partners to enhance response rates to ICPI. Thus, we analyzed the combined effect of a
vaccine based on the TLR4 ligand cold-inducible RNA binding protein (CIRP) plus ICPI. Mice were
immunized with vaccines containing ovalbumin linked to CIRP (OVA-CIRP), with or without ICPI,
and antigen-specific responses and therapeutic efficacy were tested in subcutaneous and orthotopic
mouse models of liver cancer. OVA-CIRP elicited polyepitopic T-cell responses, which were further
enhanced when combined with ICPI (anti-PD-1 and anti-CTLA-4). Combination of OVA-CIRP with
ICPI enhanced ICPI-induced therapeutic responses when tested in subcutaneous and intrahepatic
B16-OVA tumors, as well as in the orthotopic PM299L HCC model. This effect was associated
with higher OVA-specific T-cell responses in the periphery, although many tumor-infiltrating
lymphocytes still displayed an exhausted phenotype. Finally, a new vaccine containing human
glypican-3 linked to CIRP (GPC3-CIRP) induced clear responses in humanized HLA-A2.01 transgenic
mice, which increased upon combination with ICPI. Therefore, CIRP-based vaccines may generate anti-tumor immunity to enhance ICPI efficacy in HCC, although blockade of additional checkpoint
molecules and immunosuppressive targets should be also considered
Cold-Inducible RNA Binding Protein as a Vaccination Platform to Enhance Immunotherapeutic Responses against Hepatocellular Carcinoma
Therapies based on immune checkpoint inhibitors (ICPI) have yielded promising albeit
limited results in patients with hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC). Vaccines have been proposed as
combination partners to enhance response rates to ICPI. Thus, we analyzed the combined effect of a
vaccine based on the TLR4 ligand cold-inducible RNA binding protein (CIRP) plus ICPI. Mice were
immunized with vaccines containing ovalbumin linked to CIRP (OVA-CIRP), with or without ICPI,
and antigen-specific responses and therapeutic efficacy were tested in subcutaneous and orthotopic
mouse models of liver cancer. OVA-CIRP elicited polyepitopic T-cell responses, which were further
enhanced when combined with ICPI (anti-PD-1 and anti-CTLA-4). Combination of OVA-CIRP with
ICPI enhanced ICPI-induced therapeutic responses when tested in subcutaneous and intrahepatic
B16-OVA tumors, as well as in the orthotopic PM299L HCC model. This effect was associated
with higher OVA-specific T-cell responses in the periphery, although many tumor-infiltrating
lymphocytes still displayed an exhausted phenotype. Finally, a new vaccine containing human
glypican-3 linked to CIRP (GPC3-CIRP) induced clear responses in humanized HLA-A2.01 transgenic
mice, which increased upon combination with ICPI. Therefore, CIRP-based vaccines may generate anti-tumor immunity to enhance ICPI efficacy in HCC, although blockade of additional checkpoint
molecules and immunosuppressive targets should be also considered