Peer-reviewed veterinary case report
Dendritic cell progenitors engineered to express extracellular-vesicle-internalizing receptors enhance cancer immunotherapy in mouse models.
- Journal:
- Nature communications
- Year:
- 2025
- Authors:
- Ghasemi, Ali et al.
- Affiliation:
- Swiss Institute for Experimental Cancer Research (ISREC)
- Species:
- rodent
Abstract
Cancer immunotherapy using dendritic cells (DC) pulsed ex vivo with tumour antigens is considered safe, but its clinical efficacy is generally modest. Here we engineer DC progenitors (DCP), which can replenish conventional type 1 DCs (cDC1) in mice, to constitutively express IL-12 together with a non-signalling chimeric receptor, termed extracellular vesicle-internalizing receptor (EVIR). By binding to a bait molecule (GD2 disialoganglioside) expressed on cancer cells and their EVs, the EVIR enforces EV internalization by cDC1 to promote their cross-dressing with preformed, tumour-derived MHCI-peptide complexes. Upon systemic deployment to mice, the engineered DCPs cause only mild and transient elevation of liver enzymes, acquire tumour-derived material, engage tumour-specific T cells, and enhance the efficacy of PD-1 blockade in an immunotherapy-resistant melanoma model comprising both GD2-positive and -negative cancer cells, without the need for ex vivo antigen pulsing. These results indicate that EVIR-engineered DCPs may avert the positive selection of antigen-negative cancer cells, potentially addressing a critical limitation of immunotherapies targeting defined tumour antigens.
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Search related cases →Original publication: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/41093860/