Experimental Hematology & Oncology (Mar 2025)

TLR7/8 signaling activation enhances the potency of human pluripotent stem cell-derived eosinophils in cancer immunotherapy for solid tumors

  • Sheng Zhu,
  • Zhengyang Zhou,
  • Ruixin Gu,
  • Zixin Zhao,
  • Yingfeng Zhang,
  • Yudi Miao,
  • Qi Lei,
  • Tianxing Liu,
  • Guokai Wang,
  • Chenyi Dai,
  • Yi Huo,
  • Jinghao You,
  • Lejun Lv,
  • Cheng Li,
  • Ming Yin,
  • Chengyan Wang,
  • Hongkui Deng

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1186/s40164-025-00613-y
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 14, no. 1
pp. 1 – 19

Abstract

Read online

Abstract Background Efficient tumor T-cell infiltration is crucial for the effectiveness of T-cell-based therapies against solid tumors. Eosinophils play crucial roles in recruiting T cells in solid tumors. Our group has previously generated induced eosinophils (iEOs) from human pluripotent stem cells and exhibited synergistic efficacy with CAR-T cells in solid tumor inhibition. However, administrated eosinophils might influx into inflammatory lungs, posing a potential safety risk. Mitigating the safety concern and enhancing efficacy is a promising development direction for further application of eosinophils. Methods We developed a new approach to generate eosinophils with enhanced potency from human chemically reprogrammed induced pluripotent stem cells (hCiPSCs) with the Toll-like receptor (TLR) 7/8 signaling agonist R848. Results R848-activated iEOs (R-iEOs) showed significantly decreased influx to the inflamed lungs, indicating a lower risk of causing airway disorders. Furthermore, these R-iEOs had enhanced anti-tumor functions, preferably accumulated at tumor sites, and further increased T-cell infiltration. The combination of R-iEOs and CAR-T cells suppressed tumor growth in mice. Moreover, the chemo-trafficking signaling increased in R-iEOs, which may contribute to the decreased lung influx of R-iEOs and the increased tumor recruitment of T cells. Conclusion Our study provides a novel approach to alleviate the potential safety concerns associated with eosinophils while increasing T-cell infiltration in solid tumors. This finding offers a prospective strategy for incorporating eosinophils to improve CAR-T-cell immunotherapy for solid tumors in the future. Graphical Abstract

Keywords