American Association for Cancer Research
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Supplementary figure 4 from Abscopal Effects of Radiotherapy Are Enhanced by Combined Immunostimulatory mAbs and Are Dependent on CD8 T Cells and Crosspriming

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posted on 2023-03-31, 00:03 authored by María E. Rodriguez-Ruiz, Inmaculada Rodriguez, Saray Garasa, Benigno Barbes, Jose Luis Solorzano, Jose Luis Perez-Gracia, Sara Labiano, Miguel F. Sanmamed, Arantza Azpilikueta, Elixabet Bolaños, Alfonso R. Sanchez-Paulete, M. Angela Aznar, Ana Rouzaut, Kurt A. Schalper, Maria Jure-Kunkel, Ignacio Melero

A course of radiotherapy plus immunostimulatory monoclonal antibodies anti-CD137 and anti-PD-1 mAb increases CD4 and CD8 T cells in the tumor infiltrate as well as the number of tumor antigen-specific CD8 T cells.

Funding

MICINN

Departamento de Salud del Gobierno deNavarra

Redes temáticas de investigación cooperativa RETICC

European Commission VII Framework and Horizon 2020 programs

ISCIII

History

ARTICLE ABSTRACT

Preclinical and clinical evidence indicate that the proimmune effects of radiotherapy can be synergistically augmented with immunostimulatory mAbs to act both on irradiated tumor lesions and on distant, nonirradiated tumor sites. The combination of radiotherapy with immunostimulatory anti-PD1 and anti-CD137 mAbs was conducive to favorable effects on distant nonirradiated tumor lesions as observed in transplanted MC38 (colorectal cancer), B16OVA (melanoma), and 4T1 (breast cancer) models. The therapeutic activity was crucially performed by CD8 T cells, as found in selective depletion experiments. Moreover, the integrities of BATF-3–dependent dendritic cells specialized in crosspresentation/crosspriming of antigens to CD8+ T cells and of the type I IFN system were absolute requirements for the antitumor effects to occur. The irradiation regimen induced immune infiltrate changes in the irradiated and nonirradiated lesions featured by reductions in the total content of effector T cells, Tregs, and myeloid-derived suppressor cells, while effector T cells expressed more intracellular IFNγ in both the irradiated and contralateral tumors. Importantly, 48 hours after irradiation, CD8+ TILs showed brighter expression of CD137 and PD1, thereby displaying more target molecules for the corresponding mAbs. Likewise, PD1 and CD137 were induced on tumor-infiltrating lymphocytes from surgically excised human carcinomas that were irradiated ex vivo. These mechanisms involving crosspriming and CD8 T cells advocate clinical development of immunotherapy combinations with anti-PD1 plus anti-CD137 mAbs that can be synergistically accompanied by radiotherapy strategies, even if the disease is left outside the field of irradiation. Cancer Res; 76(20); 5994–6005. ©2016 AACR.