Catalogue Search | MBRL
Search Results Heading
Explore the vast range of titles available.
MBRLSearchResults
-
DisciplineDiscipline
-
Is Peer ReviewedIs Peer Reviewed
-
Item TypeItem Type
-
SubjectSubject
-
YearFrom:-To:
-
More FiltersMore FiltersSourceLanguage
Done
Filters
Reset
287
result(s) for
"Melanoma, Experimental - radiotherapy"
Sort by:
Type I IFN protects cancer cells from CD8+ T cell–mediated cytotoxicity after radiation
2019
Treatment of tumors with ionizing radiation stimulates an antitumor immune response partly dependent on induction of IFNs. These IFNs directly enhance dendritic cell and CD8+ T cell activity. Here we show that resistance to an effective antitumor immune response is also a result of IFN signaling in a different cellular compartment of the tumor, the cancer cells themselves. We abolished type I IFN signaling in cancer cells by genetic elimination of its receptor, IFNAR1. Pronounced immune responses were provoked after ionizing radiation of tumors from 4 mouse cancer cell lines with Ifnar1 knockout. This enhanced response depended on CD8+ T cells and was mediated by enhanced susceptibility to T cell-mediated killing. Induction of Serpinb9 proved to be the mechanism underlying control of susceptibility to T cell killing after radiation. Ifnar1-deficient tumors had an augmented response to anti-PD-L1 immunotherapy with or without radiation. We conclude that type I IFN can protect cancer cells from T cell-mediated cytotoxicity through regulation of Serpinb9. This result helps explain why radiation of tumors can stimulate antitumor immunity yet also result in resistance. It further suggests potential targets for intervention to improve therapy and to predict responses.
Journal Article
Loss of ADAR1 in tumours overcomes resistance to immune checkpoint blockade
2019
Most patients with cancer either do not respond to immune checkpoint blockade or develop resistance to it, often because of acquired mutations that impair antigen presentation. Here we show that loss of function of the RNA-editing enzyme ADAR1 in tumour cells profoundly sensitizes tumours to immunotherapy and overcomes resistance to checkpoint blockade. In the absence of ADAR1, A-to-I editing of interferon-inducible RNA species is reduced, leading to double-stranded RNA ligand sensing by PKR and MDA5; this results in growth inhibition and tumour inflammation, respectively. Loss of ADAR1 overcomes resistance to PD-1 checkpoint blockade caused by inactivation of antigen presentation by tumour cells. Thus, effective anti-tumour immunity is constrained by inhibitory checkpoints such as ADAR1 that limit the sensing of innate ligands. The induction of sufficient inflammation in tumours that are sensitized to interferon can bypass the therapeutic requirement for CD8
+
T cell recognition of cancer cells and may provide a general strategy to overcome immunotherapy resistance.
Deletion of the A-to-I double-stranded RNA-editing enzyme ADAR1 sensitizes tumour cells to immunotherapy.
Journal Article
YTHDF1 loss in dendritic cells potentiates radiation-induced antitumor immunity via STING-dependent type I IFN production
2024
The RNA N 6 -methyladenosine (m 6 A) reader YTHDF1 is implicated in cancer etiology and progression. We discovered that radiotherapy (RT) increased YTHDF1 expression in dendritic cells (DCs) of PBMCs from patients with cancer, but not in other immune cells tested. Elevated YTHDF1 expression in DCs was associated with poor outcomes for patients receiving RT. We found that loss of Ythdf1 in DCs enhanced the antitumor effects of ionizing radiation (IR) by increasing the cross-priming capacity of DCs across multiple murine cancer models. Mechanistically, IR upregulated YTHDF1 expression in DCs through stimulator of IFN genes/type I IFN (STING/IFN-I) signaling. YTHDF1 in turn triggered STING degradation by increasing lysosomal cathepsins, thereby reducing IFN-I production. We created a YTHDF1 deletion/inhibition prototype DC vaccine that significantly improved the therapeutic effect of RT and radioimmunotherapy in a murine melanoma model. Our findings reveal a layer of regulation between YTHDF1/m 6 A and STING in response to IR, which opens new paths for the development of YTHDF1-targeting therapies.
Journal Article
Type I interferons induced by radiation therapy mediate recruitment and effector function of CD8+ T cells
by
Murphy, Shawn P.
,
Lord, Edith M.
,
Gerber, Scott A.
in
Animals
,
Antigens
,
Antigens, Neoplasm - immunology
2014
The need for an intact immune system for cancer radiation therapy to be effective suggests that radiation not only acts directly on the tumor but also indirectly, through the activation of host immune components. Recent studies demonstrated that endogenous type I interferons (type I IFNs) play a role in radiation-mediated anti-tumor immunity by enhancing the ability of dendritic cells to cross-prime CD8
+
T cells. However, it is still unclear to what extent endogenous type I IFNs contribute to the recruitment and function of CD8
+
T cells. Little is also known about the effects of type I IFNs on myeloid cells. In the current study, we demonstrate that type I and type II IFNs (IFN-γ) are both required for the increased production of CXCL10 (IP-10) chemokine by myeloid cells within the tumor after radiation treatment. Radiation-induced intratumoral IP-10 levels in turn correlate with tumor-infiltrating CD8
+
T cell numbers. Moreover, type I IFNs promote potent tumor-reactive CD8
+
T cells by directly affecting the phenotype, effector molecule production, and enhancing cytolytic activity. Using a unique inducible expression system to increase local levels of IFN-α exogenously, we show here that the capacity of radiation therapy to result in tumor control can be enhanced. Our preclinical approach to study the effects of local increase in IFN-α levels can be used to further optimize the combination therapy strategy in terms of dosing and scheduling, which may lead to better clinical outcome.
Journal Article
Temporal analysis of type 1 interferon activation in tumor cells following external beam radiotherapy or targeted radionuclide therapy
by
Kim, KyungMann
,
Chakravarty, Ishan
,
Grudzinski, Joseph J.
in
Animals
,
Antigen presentation
,
Cancer therapies
2021
Clinical interest in combining targeted radionuclide therapies (TRT) with immunotherapies is growing. External beam radiation therapy (EBRT) activates a type 1 interferon (IFN1) response mediated via stimulator of interferon genes (STING), and this is critical to its therapeutic interaction with immune checkpoint blockade. However, little is known about the time course of IFN1 activation after EBRT or whether this may be induced by decay of a TRT source.
We examined the IFN1 response and expression of immune susceptibility markers in B78 and B16 melanomas and MOC2 head and neck cancer murine models using qPCR and western blot. For TRT, we used
Y chelated to NM600, an alkylphosphocholine analog that exhibits selective uptake and retention in tumor cells including B78 and MOC2.
We observed significant IFN1 activation in all cell lines, with peak activation in B78, B16, and MOC2 cell lines occurring 7, 7, and 1 days, respectively, following RT for all doses. This effect was STING-dependent. Select IFN response genes remained upregulated at 14 days following RT. IFN1 activation following STING agonist treatment
was identical to RT suggesting time course differences between cell lines were mediated by STING pathway kinetics and not DNA damage susceptibility.
delivery of EBRT and TRT to B78 and MOC2 tumors resulted in a comparable time course and magnitude of IFN1 activation. In the MOC2 model, the combination of
Y-NM600 and dual checkpoint blockade therapy reduced tumor growth and prolonged survival compared to single agent therapy and cumulative dose equivalent combination EBRT and dual checkpoint blockade therapy.
We report the time course of the STING-dependent IFN1 response following radiation in multiple murine tumor models. We show the potential of TRT to stimulate IFN1 activation that is comparable to that observed with EBRT and this may be critical to the therapeutic integration of TRT with immunotherapies.
Journal Article
Combination radiation and αPD-L1 enhance tumor control by stimulating CD8+ PD-1+ TCF-1+ T cells in the tumor-draining lymph node
2025
Combination radiotherapy (RT) and αPD-L1 therapy has potential to enhance local and distant (abscopal) tumor control, however, clinical results in humans have been variable. Using murine melanoma models, we found RT + αPD-L1 increases intra-tumor progenitor CD8+ PD-1+ TCF-1+ T cells. This increase depends on trafficking of the PD-1+ TCF-1+ cells from the tumor-draining lymph node (TdLN) to the tumor. RT alone promotes the expansion and differentiation of the TdLN derived PD-1+ TCF-1+ cells into TIM-3+ GZMB+ TCF-1- effector-like cells in the tumor with further enhancement after the addition of αPD-L1. In the TdLN, combination therapy enriches for a novel PD-1+ TCF-1+ TOX- LY6A+ subset with expression of a type I interferon and migratory signature. This subset is able to traffic to the tumor and differentiate into TIM-3+ TCF-1- cells. Finally, we found that ablation of the PD-1+ TCF-1+ T cell population attenuates the enhanced tumor control observed with combination RT + αPD-L1. These results suggest that abscopal response failures may be secondary to impaired stimulation of TdLN CD8+ PD-1 + TCF-1+ T cells or an inability of PD-1+ TCF-1+ cells in the TdLN to traffic to the tumor.
Combination radiotherapy (RT) + αPD-L1 enhances tumor control via a tumor-draining lymph node (TdLN)-derived CD8+ PD-1+ TCF-1+ T cells. RT + αPD-L1 induces a novel LY6A+ subset in the TdLN that migrates to the tumor and differentiates into effectors.
Journal Article
Hypofractionated radiotherapy combined with lenalidomide improves systemic antitumor activity in mouse solid tumor models
by
Rao, Xi
,
Zhang, Xuanwei
,
Niedermann, Gabriele
in
Animals
,
CD8-Positive T-Lymphocytes - drug effects
,
CD8-Positive T-Lymphocytes - immunology
2024
Hypofractionated radiotherapy (hRT) can induce a T cell-mediated abscopal effect on non-irradiated tumor lesions, especially in combination with immune checkpoint blockade (ICB). However, clinically, this effect is still rare, and ICB-mediated adverse events are common. Lenalidomide (lena) is an anti-angiogenic and immunomodulatory drug used in the treatment of hematologic malignancies. We here investigated in solid tumor models whether lena can enhance the abscopal effect in double combination with hRT.
In two syngeneic bilateral tumor models (B16-CD133 melanoma and MC38 colon carcinoma), the primary tumor was treated with hRT. Lena was given daily for 3 weeks. Besides tumor size and survival, the dependence of the antitumor effects on CD8
cells, type-I IFN signaling, and T cell costimulation was determined with depleting or blocking antibodies. Tumor-specific CD8
T cells were quantified, and their differentiation and effector status were characterized by multicolor flow cytometry using MHC-I tetramers and various antibodies. In addition, dendritic cell (DC)-mediated tumor antigen cross-presentation
and directly
and the composition of tumor-associated vascular endothelial cells were investigated.
In both tumor models, the hRT/lena double combination induced a significant abscopal effect. Control of the non-irradiated secondary tumor and survival were considerably better than with the respective monotherapies. The abscopal effect was strongly dependent on CD8
cells and associated with an increase in tumor-specific CD8
T cells in the non-irradiated tumor and its draining lymph nodes. Additionally, we found more tumor-specific T cells with a stem-like (TCF1
TIM3
PD1
) and a transitory (TCF1
TIM3
CD101
PD1
) exhausted phenotype and more expressing effector molecules such as GzmB, IFNγ, and TNFα. Moreover, in the non-irradiated tumor, hRT/lena treatment also increased DCs cross-presenting a tumor model antigen. Blocking type-I IFN signaling, which is essential for cross-presentation, completely abrogated the abscopal effect. A gene expression analysis of bone marrow-derived DCs revealed that lena augmented the expression of IFN response genes and genes associated with differentiation, maturation (including CD70, CD83, and CD86), migration to lymph nodes, and T cell activation. Flow cytometry confirmed an increase in CD70
CD83
CD86
DCs in both irradiated and abscopal tumors. Moreover, the hRT/lena-induced abscopal effect was diminished when these costimulatory molecules were blocked simultaneously using antibodies. In line with the enhanced infiltration by DCs and tumor-specific CD8
T cells, including more stem-like cells, hRT/lena also increased tumor-associated high endothelial cells (TA-HECs) in the non-irradiated tumor.
We demonstrate that lena can augment the hRT-induced abscopal effect in mouse solid tumor models in a CD8 T cell- and IFN-I-dependent manner, correlating with enhanced anti-tumor CD8 T cell immunity, DC cross-presentation, and TA-HEC numbers. Our findings may be helpful for the planning of clinical trials in (oligo)metastatic patients.
Journal Article
Combination of CHEK1/2 inhibition and ionizing radiation results in abscopal tumor response through increased micronuclei formation
by
Karagounis Ilias V
,
Facciabene Andrea
,
Koumenis Constantinos
in
CD8 antigen
,
Cell activation
,
Cell cycle
2020
We explore a novel strategy of activating immune signaling through increased micronuclei formation utilizing a cell cycle checkpoint inhibitor to drive cell cycle progression following ionizing radiation. The Chk1/2 inhibitor AZD7762 is used to abrogate radiation therapy (RT)-induced G2/M cell cycle arrest in multiple cell lines and, we find that this therapeutic combination promotes increased micronuclei formation in vitro and subsequently drives increased type I interferon signaling and cytotoxic T-cell activation. In vivo studies using B16-F10 melanoma cancer cells implanted in C57/BL6 mice demonstrate improved rates of tumor control at the abscopal (unirradiated) site, located outside of the radiation field, only in the AZD7762 + RT group, with a corresponding reduction in mean tumor volume, increase in the CD8 T-cell population, and immune activated gene signaling. Our results demonstrate that targeted inhibition of cell cycle checkpoint activation following ionizing radiation drives increased production of immunogenic micronuclei, leading to systemic tumor response with potential future clinical benefit.
Journal Article
Verification of 5-Aminolevurinic Radiodynamic Therapy Using a Murine Melanoma Brain Metastasis Model
by
Nagasawa, Shinsuke
,
Takahashi, Junko
,
Sato, Chikara
in
Aminolevulinic Acid - therapeutic use
,
Animals
,
Brain cancer
2019
Melanoma is a highly aggressive cancer with a propensity for brain metastases. These can be treated by radiotherapy, but the radiation-resistant nature of melanoma makes the prognosis for melanoma patients with brain metastases poor. Previously, we demonstrated that treatment of mice with subcutaneous melanoma with 5-aminolevurinic acid (5-ALA) and X-rays in combination, (“radiodynamic therapy (RDT)”), instead of with 5-ALA and laser beams (“photodynamic therapy”), improved tumor suppression in vivo. Here, using the B16-Luc melanoma brain metastasis model, we demonstrate that 5-ALA RDT effectively treats brain metastasis. We also studied how 5-ALA RDT damages cells in vitro using a B16 melanoma culture. Cell culture preincubated with 5-ALA alone increased intracellular photosensitizer protoporphyrin IX. On X-ray irradiation, the cells enhanced their ∙OH radical generation, which subsequently induced γH2AX, a marker of DNA double-strand breaks in their nuclei, but decreased mitochondrial membrane potential. After two days, the cell cycle was arrested. When 5-ALA RDT was applied to the brain melanoma metastasis model in vivo, suppression of tumor growth was indicated. Therapeutic efficacy in melanoma treatment has recently been improved by molecular targeted drugs and immune checkpoint inhibitors. Treatment with these drugs is now expected to be combined with 5-ALA RDT to further improve therapeutic efficacy.
Journal Article
Oral Lentinula edodes mycelia extract enhances the antitumor effect of radiotherapy via gut-associated activation of dendritic and cytotoxic T cells
2026
Oral administration of
Lentinula edodes
mycelia extract (L.E.M.) has been shown to stimulate systemic T cell–mediated antitumor immunity and inhibit tumor growth in mice, suggesting its potential to modulate host immune responses. However, the route of this systemic antitumor effect remains unclear. This study focused on gut-associated immune mechanisms by analyzing mesenteric lymph nodes (MLNs), a major component of the gut-associated lymphoid tissue (GALT), and examined whether oral L.E.M. enhances the antitumor efficacy of radiation therapy (RT) in a B16F10-OVA melanoma model. L.E.M. administration upregulated MHC class II and CD86 expression on CD11c
+
dendritic cells (DCs) in MLNs and significantly increased the proportion of CD103
+
subsets, indicating DC maturation within the GALT. In a B16F10-OVA melanoma model treated with X-ray irradiation, L.E.M. further enhanced DC maturation and increased CD8α
+
DCs in the spleen, accompanied by elevated effector and central memory fractions of CD8
+
T cells in peripheral blood. Antigen-specific CD8
+
T cells (OVA tetramer
+
) were significantly enriched within tumors, and L.E.M. combined with RT achieved greater tumor growth inhibition than RT alone. These findings demonstrate that oral L.E.M. activates GALT-mediated DC and CD8
+
T-cell responses, thereby augmenting the antitumor immune effects of RT.
Journal Article