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A liposomal RNA vaccine inducing neoantigen-specific CD4 <sup>+</sup> T cells augments the antitumor activity of local radiotherapy in mice

Nadja Salomon, Fulvia Vascotto, Abderaouf Selmi, Mathias Vormehr, Juliane Quinkhardt, Thomas Bukur, Barbara Schrörs, Martin Löewer, Mustafa Diken, Özlem Türeci, Uğur Şahin, Sebastian Kreiter

2020OncoImmunology46 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Antigen-encoding, lipoplex-formulated RNA (RNA-LPX) enables systemic delivery to lymphoid compartments and selective expression in resident antigen-presenting cells. We report here that the rejection of CT26 tumors, mediated by local radiotherapy (LRT), is further augmented in a CD8+ T cell-dependent manner by an RNA-LPX vaccine that encodes CD4+ T cell-recognized neoantigens (CD4 neoantigen vaccine). Whereas CD8+ T cells induced by LRT alone were primarily directed against the immunodominant gp70 antigen, mice treated with LRT plus the CD4 neoantigen vaccine rejected gp70-negative tumors and were protected from rechallenge with these tumors, indicating a potent poly-antigenic CD8+ T cell response and T cell memory. In the spleens of CD4 neoantigen-vaccinated mice, we found a high number of activated, poly-functional, Th1-like CD4+ T cells against ME1, the immunodominant CD4 neoantigen within the poly-neoantigen vaccine. LRT itself strongly increased CD8+ T cell numbers and clonal expansion. However, tumor infiltrates of mice treated with CD4 neoantigen vaccine/LRT, as compared to LRT alone, displayed a higher fraction of activated gp70-specific CD8+ T cells, lower PD-1/LAG-3 expression and contained ME1-specific IFNγ+ CD4+ T cells capable of providing cognate help. CD4 neoantigen vaccine/LRT treatment followed by anti-CTLA-4 antibody therapy further enhanced the efficacy with complete remission of gp70-negative CT26 tumors and survival of all mice. Our data highlight the power of combining synergistic modes of action and warrants further exploration of the presented treatment schema.

Topics & Concepts

CD8AntigenImmunologyT cellCytotoxic T cellCancer researchBiologyCD28VirologyMedicineImmune systemIn vitroBiochemistryImmunotherapy and Immune ResponsesCancer Immunotherapy and BiomarkersCAR-T cell therapy research
A liposomal RNA vaccine inducing neoantigen-specific CD4 <sup>+</sup> T cells augments the antitumor activity of local radiotherapy in mice | Litcius