PLoS ONE (Jan 2019)

Dendritic cells pulsed with placental gp96 promote tumor-reactive immune responses.

  • Huaguo Zheng,
  • Lanlan Liu,
  • Han Zhang,
  • Fangming Kan,
  • Shuo Wang,
  • Yang Li,
  • Huaqin Tian,
  • Songdong Meng

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0211490
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 14, no. 1
p. e0211490

Abstract

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Defining and loading of immunogenic and safe cancer antigens remain a major challenge for designing dendritic cell (DC)-based cancer vaccines. In this study, we defined a prototype strategy of using DC-based vaccines pulsed with placenta-derived heat shock protein gp96 to induces anti-tumor T cell responses. Placental gp96 was efficiently taken up by CD11c+ bone marrow-derived DCs (BMDCs) and resulted in moderate BMDC maturation. Splenocytes and cytotoxic T cells (CTLs) generated with mouse BMDCs pulsed with placental gp96 specifically lysed B16 melanoma and LLC lung carcinoma cells. In both transplantable melanoma and lung carcinoma mice models, immunization with placental gp96-stimulated BMDCs led to a significant decrease in tumor growth and mouse mortality with respect to mice treated with liver gp96-pulsed BMDCs or placental gp96 alone. This vaccine induced strong cross-reactive tumor-specific T cell responses. Our results revealed that DCs pulsed with placenta-derived gp96 represent an effective immunotherapy to induce tumor-reactive immune responses, possibly via loading DCs with its associated carcinoembryonic antigens.