作者
Olga Zimmermannová,Alexandra G. Ferreira,Ervin Ascic,Marta Velasco,Ilia Kurochkin,Morten Hansen,Özcan Met,Inês Caiado,Ilja E. Shapiro,Justine Michaux,Marion Humbert,Diego Soto-Cabrera,Hreinn Benonisson,Rita Silvério-Alves,David Gomez Jimenez,Carina Bernardo,Monika Bauden,Roland Andersson,Mattias Höglund,Kenichi Miharada,Yukio Nakamura,Stéphanie Hugues,Lennart Greiff,Malin Lindstedt,Fábio F. Rosa,Cristiana F. Pires,Michal Bassani‐Sternberg,Inge Marie Svane,Carlos‐Filipe Pereira
摘要
Decreased antigen presentation contributes to the ability of cancer cells to evade the immune system. We used the minimal gene regulatory network of type 1 conventional dendritic cells (cDC1) to reprogram cancer cells into professional antigen-presenting cells (tumor-APCs). Enforced expression of the transcription factors PU.1, IRF8, and BATF3 (PIB) was sufficient to induce the cDC1 phenotype in 36 cell lines derived from human and mouse hematological and solid tumors. Within 9 days of reprogramming, tumor-APCs acquired transcriptional and epigenetic programs associated with cDC1 cells. Reprogramming restored the expression of antigen presentation complexes and costimulatory molecules on the surfaces of tumor cells, allowing the presentation of endogenous tumor antigens on MHC-I and facilitating targeted killing by CD8 + T cells. Functionally, tumor-APCs engulfed and processed proteins and dead cells, secreted inflammatory cytokines, and cross-presented antigens to naïve CD8 + T cells. Human primary tumor cells could also be reprogrammed to increase their capability to present antigen and to activate patient-specific tumor-infiltrating lymphocytes. In addition to acquiring improved antigen presentation, tumor-APCs had impaired tumorigenicity in vitro and in vivo. Injection of in vitro generated melanoma-derived tumor-APCs into subcutaneous melanoma tumors delayed tumor growth and increased survival in mice. Antitumor immunity elicited by tumor-APCs was synergistic with immune checkpoint inhibitors. Our approach serves as a platform for the development of immunotherapies that endow cancer cells with the capability to process and present endogenous tumor antigens.