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Tailored chemokine receptor modification improves homing of adoptive therapy T cells in a spontaneous tumor model

In recent years, tumor Adoptive Cell Therapy (ACT), using administration of ex vivo-enhanced T cells from the cancer patient, has become a promising therapeutic strategy. However, efficient homing of the anti-tumoral T cells to the tumor or metastatic site still remains a substantial hurdle. Yet the...

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Autores principales: Garetto, Stefano, Sardi, Claudia, Martini, Elisa, Roselli, Giuliana, Morone, Diego, Angioni, Roberta, Cianciotti, Beatrice Claudia, Trovato, Anna Elisa, Franchina, Davide Giuseppe, Castino, Giovanni Francesco, Vignali, Debora, Erreni, Marco, Marchesi, Federica, Rumio, Cristiano, Kallikourdis, Marinos
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Impact Journals LLC 2016
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5190004/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/27177227
http://dx.doi.org/10.18632/oncotarget.9280
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author Garetto, Stefano
Sardi, Claudia
Martini, Elisa
Roselli, Giuliana
Morone, Diego
Angioni, Roberta
Cianciotti, Beatrice Claudia
Trovato, Anna Elisa
Franchina, Davide Giuseppe
Castino, Giovanni Francesco
Vignali, Debora
Erreni, Marco
Marchesi, Federica
Rumio, Cristiano
Kallikourdis, Marinos
author_facet Garetto, Stefano
Sardi, Claudia
Martini, Elisa
Roselli, Giuliana
Morone, Diego
Angioni, Roberta
Cianciotti, Beatrice Claudia
Trovato, Anna Elisa
Franchina, Davide Giuseppe
Castino, Giovanni Francesco
Vignali, Debora
Erreni, Marco
Marchesi, Federica
Rumio, Cristiano
Kallikourdis, Marinos
author_sort Garetto, Stefano
collection PubMed
description In recent years, tumor Adoptive Cell Therapy (ACT), using administration of ex vivo-enhanced T cells from the cancer patient, has become a promising therapeutic strategy. However, efficient homing of the anti-tumoral T cells to the tumor or metastatic site still remains a substantial hurdle. Yet the tumor site itself attracts both tumor-promoting and anti-tumoral immune cell populations through the secretion of chemokines. We attempted to identify these chemokines in a model of spontaneous metastasis, in order to “hijack” their function by expressing matching chemokine receptors on the cytotoxic T cells used in ACT, thus allowing us to enhance the recruitment of these therapeutic cells. Here we show that this enabled the modified T cells to preferentially home into spontaneous lymph node metastases in the TRAMP model, as well as in an inducible tumor model, E.G7-OVA. Due to the improved homing, the modified CD8(+) T cells displayed an enhanced in vivo protective effect, as seen by a significant delay in E.G7-OVA tumor growth. These results offer a proof of principle for the tailored application of chemokine receptor modification as a means of improving T cell homing to the target tumor, thus enhancing ACT efficacy. Surprisingly, we also uncover that the formation of the peri-tumoral fibrotic capsule, which has been shown to impede T cell access to tumor, is partially dependent on host T cell presence. This finding, which would be impossible to observe in immunodeficient model studies, highlights possible conflicting roles that T cells may play in a therapeutic context.
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spelling pubmed-51900042017-01-05 Tailored chemokine receptor modification improves homing of adoptive therapy T cells in a spontaneous tumor model Garetto, Stefano Sardi, Claudia Martini, Elisa Roselli, Giuliana Morone, Diego Angioni, Roberta Cianciotti, Beatrice Claudia Trovato, Anna Elisa Franchina, Davide Giuseppe Castino, Giovanni Francesco Vignali, Debora Erreni, Marco Marchesi, Federica Rumio, Cristiano Kallikourdis, Marinos Oncotarget Research Paper In recent years, tumor Adoptive Cell Therapy (ACT), using administration of ex vivo-enhanced T cells from the cancer patient, has become a promising therapeutic strategy. However, efficient homing of the anti-tumoral T cells to the tumor or metastatic site still remains a substantial hurdle. Yet the tumor site itself attracts both tumor-promoting and anti-tumoral immune cell populations through the secretion of chemokines. We attempted to identify these chemokines in a model of spontaneous metastasis, in order to “hijack” their function by expressing matching chemokine receptors on the cytotoxic T cells used in ACT, thus allowing us to enhance the recruitment of these therapeutic cells. Here we show that this enabled the modified T cells to preferentially home into spontaneous lymph node metastases in the TRAMP model, as well as in an inducible tumor model, E.G7-OVA. Due to the improved homing, the modified CD8(+) T cells displayed an enhanced in vivo protective effect, as seen by a significant delay in E.G7-OVA tumor growth. These results offer a proof of principle for the tailored application of chemokine receptor modification as a means of improving T cell homing to the target tumor, thus enhancing ACT efficacy. Surprisingly, we also uncover that the formation of the peri-tumoral fibrotic capsule, which has been shown to impede T cell access to tumor, is partially dependent on host T cell presence. This finding, which would be impossible to observe in immunodeficient model studies, highlights possible conflicting roles that T cells may play in a therapeutic context. Impact Journals LLC 2016-05-10 /pmc/articles/PMC5190004/ /pubmed/27177227 http://dx.doi.org/10.18632/oncotarget.9280 Text en Copyright: © 2016 Garetto et al. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.5/ This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited.
spellingShingle Research Paper
Garetto, Stefano
Sardi, Claudia
Martini, Elisa
Roselli, Giuliana
Morone, Diego
Angioni, Roberta
Cianciotti, Beatrice Claudia
Trovato, Anna Elisa
Franchina, Davide Giuseppe
Castino, Giovanni Francesco
Vignali, Debora
Erreni, Marco
Marchesi, Federica
Rumio, Cristiano
Kallikourdis, Marinos
Tailored chemokine receptor modification improves homing of adoptive therapy T cells in a spontaneous tumor model
title Tailored chemokine receptor modification improves homing of adoptive therapy T cells in a spontaneous tumor model
title_full Tailored chemokine receptor modification improves homing of adoptive therapy T cells in a spontaneous tumor model
title_fullStr Tailored chemokine receptor modification improves homing of adoptive therapy T cells in a spontaneous tumor model
title_full_unstemmed Tailored chemokine receptor modification improves homing of adoptive therapy T cells in a spontaneous tumor model
title_short Tailored chemokine receptor modification improves homing of adoptive therapy T cells in a spontaneous tumor model
title_sort tailored chemokine receptor modification improves homing of adoptive therapy t cells in a spontaneous tumor model
topic Research Paper
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5190004/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/27177227
http://dx.doi.org/10.18632/oncotarget.9280
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