作者
Ervin Ascic,Fritiof Åkerström,M. Nair,André Rosa,Ilia Kurochkin,Olga Zimmermannová,Xavier Catena,Nadezhda Rotankova,Charlotte Veser,Michał Rudnik,Tommaso Ballocci,Tiffany Schärer,Xiaoli Huang,M. Torres,Emilie Renaud,Marta Velasco,Özcan Met,David Askmyr,Malin Lindstedt,Lennart Greiff,Laure‐Anne Ligeon,Irina Agarkova,Inge Marie Svane,Cristiana F. Pires,Fábio F. Rosa,Carlos‐Filipe Pereira
摘要
Immunotherapy can lead to long-term survival for some cancer patients, yet generalized success has been hampered by insufficient antigen presentation and exclusion of immunogenic cells from the tumor microenvironment. Here, we developed an approach to reprogram tumor cells in vivo by adenoviral delivery of the transcription factors PU.1, IRF8, and BATF3, which enabled them to present antigens as type 1 conventional dendritic cells. Reprogrammed tumor cells remodeled their tumor microenvironment, recruited, and expanded polyclonal cytotoxic T cells, induced tumor regressions, and established long-term systemic immunity in multiple mouse melanoma models. In human tumor spheroids and xenografts, reprogramming to immunogenic dendritic-like cells progressed independently of immunosuppression, which usually limits immunotherapy. Our study paves the way for human clinical trials of in vivo immune cell reprogramming for cancer immunotherapy.