Plasmacytoid Dendritic Cells and Cancer Immunotherapy
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. pDCs, Cross-Priming and Anti-Tumor CD8 T Cell Immunity
3. Current pDC-Based Cancer Vaccine Clinical Trials
3.1. Phase I Clinical Trials for pDC Cancer Vaccines
3.2. Phase II Clinical Trial for pDC Cancer Vaccines
4. Would Plasmacytoid DC-Derived Exosomes Be Used as Cancer Vaccines?
5. Conclusions and Future Perspectives
Author Contributions
Funding
Informed Consent Statement
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Function in Tumors | Phenotypes and Mechanisms | References |
---|---|---|
Negative role in anti-tumor immune responses | Accumulation of pDCs correlated with poor diagnosis in multiple tumors. Potential mechanisms include induction of regulatory T cells through ICOSL- or IDO-dependent pathways. | [29,30,74,75,76,77,78] |
Positive role in anti-tumor immunity | Tumor-infiltrated pDCs correlate with survival in human colon cancer, and activation pDCs lead to enhance anti-tumor immunity. Possible mechanisms include: IFN-I-dependent enhancement of function of NK cells and T cells, as well as cross-priming by cDCs; enhanced direct cross-priming. However, the exact contributions of IFN-I versus pDC-mediated cross-priming remain poorly understood. | [64,79,80,81,82,83,84,85,86] |
Tumoricidal activity | Activated pDCs directly kill tumor cells through TRAIL- and Granzyme B-dependent mechanisms leading to tumor regression. | [95,96,97,98] |
Cancer Type | Phase | pDC Used | Doses | Patients | Toxicity | Clinical Outcomes |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
gp100- expressing distant metastatic melanoma | I | Isolated naturally occurring mature pDCs were loaded with gp100154–162, gp100280–288 and tyrosinase-derived peptide tyrosinase369–377. | Three intranodal injections every 2 weeks. Two maintenance cycles consisting of 3 biweekly vaccinations if no disease progression | Fifteen HLA-A2+ patients with distant metastatic melanoma | Only grade 1–2 toxicity | Generation of CD8 T cell responses specific to tumor antigens; two patients showed durable stable disease and were eligible for 2 additional cycles consisting of 3 pDC vaccinations. One patient with a mixed response [82]. |
Castration-resistant prostate cancer | IIa | Blood-derived pDCs, CD1a+ cDC2s or a combination of pDCs and cDC2s, loaded with NY-ESO-1157–165, MAGE-C2336– 344 and NY-ESO-1 and MUC1 PepTivators (overlapping long peptides that cover the complete protein). | Maximal 9 times | 21 (21 HLA-A2+ patients with confirm adenocarcinoma of the prostate, 7 for each treatment) | Grade 1–2 toxicity | A partial radiological response was observed in 1 patient; 12 patients (57%) with stable disease > 6 months. No significant difference among the three treatment arms (cDCs, pDCs and cDCs + pDCs) [85]. |
Stage IIIC or IV confirmed unresectable metastatic melanoma | Ib | pDCs from a cell line loaded with one of three melanoma antigens separately: MART126–35L, MAGEA3271–279, gp100209–217 and TYR369–377. | 3 weekly injections | 9 HLA-A2+ stage IIIC or IV patients with confirmed unresectable meta- static melanoma | Grade 1–3 toxicity | Three weekly injections of up to 60 × 106 cells were safe and well tolerated. Two patients from the highest dose group (60 × 106 cells) displayed a stable disease [86]. |
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Fu, C.; Zhou, L.; Mi, Q.-S.; Jiang, A. Plasmacytoid Dendritic Cells and Cancer Immunotherapy. Cells 2022, 11, 222. https://doi.org/10.3390/cells11020222
Fu C, Zhou L, Mi Q-S, Jiang A. Plasmacytoid Dendritic Cells and Cancer Immunotherapy. Cells. 2022; 11(2):222. https://doi.org/10.3390/cells11020222
Chicago/Turabian StyleFu, Chunmei, Li Zhou, Qing-Sheng Mi, and Aimin Jiang. 2022. "Plasmacytoid Dendritic Cells and Cancer Immunotherapy" Cells 11, no. 2: 222. https://doi.org/10.3390/cells11020222
APA StyleFu, C., Zhou, L., Mi, Q.-S., & Jiang, A. (2022). Plasmacytoid Dendritic Cells and Cancer Immunotherapy. Cells, 11(2), 222. https://doi.org/10.3390/cells11020222