作者
C. Hotz,Timothy R. Wagenaar,Friederike Gieseke,Dinesh S. Bangari,Michelle Callahan,Hui Cao,Jan Diekmann,Mustafa Diken,Christian Grunwitz,Andy Hebert,Karl Hsu,Marie Bernardo,Katalin Karikó,Sebastian Kreiter,Andreas N. Kuhn,Mikhail Levit,Natalia V. Malkova,Serena Masciari,Jack Pollard,Hui Qü,Sue Ryan,Abderaouf Selmi,Julia Schlereth,Kuldeep Singh,Fangxian Sun,Bodo Tillmann,Tatiana Tolstykh,William Weber,Lena Wicke,Sonja Witzel,Qunyan Yu,Yuan Zhang,Gang Zheng,Joanne Lager,Gary J. Nabel,Uğur Şahin,Dmitri Wiederschain
摘要
Local immunotherapy ideally stimulates immune responses against tumors while avoiding toxicities associated with systemic administration. Current strategies for tumor-targeted, gene-based delivery, however, are limited by adverse effects such as off-targeting or antivector immunity. We investigated the intratumoral administration of saline-formulated messenger (m)RNA encoding four cytokines that were identified as mediators of tumor regression across different tumor models: interleukin-12 (IL-12) single chain, interferon-α (IFN-α), granulocyte-macrophage colony-stimulating factor, and IL-15 sushi. Effective antitumor activity of these cytokines relied on multiple immune cell populations and was accompanied by intratumoral IFN-γ induction, systemic antigen-specific T cell expansion, increased granzyme B+ T cell infiltration, and formation of immune memory. Antitumor activity extended beyond the treated lesions and inhibited growth of distant tumors and disseminated tumors. Combining the mRNAs with immunomodulatory antibodies enhanced antitumor responses in both injected and uninjected tumors, thus improving survival and tumor regression. Consequently, clinical testing of this cytokine-encoding mRNA mixture is now underway.