Investigative and Clinical Urology (May 2024)

Prostate cancer therapy using immune checkpoint molecules to target recombinant dendritic cells

  • Se Young Choi,
  • Yunlim Kim,
  • Bumjin Lim,
  • Chung Beum Wee,
  • In Ho Chang,
  • Choung-Soo Kim

DOI
https://doi.org/10.4111/icu.20230348
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 65, no. 3
pp. 300 – 310

Abstract

Read online

Purpose: We developed immune checkpoint molecules to target recombinant dendritic cells (DCs) and verified their anti-tumor efficacy and immune response against prostate cancer. Materials and Methods: DCs were generated from mononuclear cells in the tibia and femur bone marrow of mice. We knocked down the programmed death ligand 1 (PD-L1) on monocyte-derived DCs through siRNA PD-L1. Cell surface antigens were immune fluorescently stained through flow cytometry to analyze cultured cell phenotypes. Furthermore, we evaluated the efficacy of monocyte-derived DCs and recombinant DCs in a prostate cancer mouse model with subcutaneous TRAMP-C1 cells. Lastly, DC-induced mixed lymphocyte and lymphocyte-only proliferations were compared to determine cultured DCs’ function. Results: Compared to the control group, siRNA PD-L1 therapeutic DC-treated mice exhibited significantly inhibited tumor volume and increased tumor cell apoptosis. Remarkably, this treatment substantially augmented interferon-gamma and interleukin-2 production by stimulating T-cells in an allogeneic mixed lymphocyte reaction. Moreover, we demonstrated that PD-L1 gene silencing improved cell proliferation and cytokine production. Conclusions: We developed monocyte-derived DCs transfected with PD-L1 siRNA from mouse bone marrow. Our study highlights that PD-L1 inhibition in DCs increases antigen-specific immune responses, corroborating previous immunotherapy methodology findings regarding castration-resistant prostate cancer.

Keywords