Interferon gene therapy reprograms the leukemia microenvironment inducing protective immunity to multiple tumor antigens.
Giulia EscobarLuigi BarbarossaGiulia BarbieraMargherita NorelliMarco GenuaAnna RanghettiTiziana PlatiBarbara CamisaChiara BrombinDavide CittaroAndrea AnnoniAttilio BondanzaRenato OstuniBernhard GentnerLuigi NaldiniPublished in: Nature communications (2018)
Immunotherapy is emerging as a new pillar of cancer treatment with potential to cure. However, many patients still fail to respond to these therapies. Among the underlying factors, an immunosuppressive tumor microenvironment (TME) plays a major role. Here we show that monocyte-mediated gene delivery of IFNα inhibits leukemia in a mouse model. IFN gene therapy counteracts leukemia-induced expansion of immunosuppressive myeloid cells and imposes an immunostimulatory program to the TME, as shown by bulk and single-cell transcriptome analyses. This reprogramming promotes T-cell priming and effector function against multiple surrogate tumor-specific antigens, inhibiting leukemia growth in our experimental model. Durable responses are observed in a fraction of mice and are further increased combining gene therapy with checkpoint blockers. Furthermore, IFN gene therapy strongly enhances anti-tumor activity of adoptively transferred T cells engineered with tumor-specific TCR or CAR, overcoming suppressive signals in the leukemia TME. These findings warrant further investigations on the potential development of our gene therapy strategy towards clinical testing.
Keyphrases
- gene therapy
- dendritic cells
- acute myeloid leukemia
- bone marrow
- regulatory t cells
- single cell
- immune response
- mouse model
- end stage renal disease
- ejection fraction
- rna seq
- newly diagnosed
- dna damage
- induced apoptosis
- chronic kidney disease
- signaling pathway
- gene expression
- stem cells
- high throughput
- endothelial cells
- adipose tissue
- dna methylation
- high glucose
- oxidative stress
- cell cycle arrest
- diabetic rats
- insulin resistance
- human health
- angiotensin converting enzyme
- type iii