Co-immunizing with PD-L1 induces CD8+ DCs-mediated anti-tumor immunity in multiple myeloma.

Journal: International Immunopharmacology
Published:
Abstract

Tumor therapeutic vaccines have faced a challenge for effective protection against malignant tumors by inducing tumor-specific CD8+ T cell responses. Here, we designed a DNA vaccine containing a tumor-specific antigen of Dickkopf-1 (DKK-1) and an immune checkpoint of programmed death ligand 1 (PD-L1) delivered by PLGA/PEI nanoparticle-mediated delivery system for multiple myeloma therapy. Murine subcutaneous tumor model established with human DKK1 (hDKK-1)-SP2/0 cells were intramuscularly immunized with PLGA/PEI-pPD-L1/pDDK-1 vaccine and equal amount of control 3 times at 10 day-intervals. Compared with PLGA/PEI-pDKK1 immunization group, PLGA/PEI-pPD-L1/pDKK-1 co-immunization enhanced the induction and mature of CD11c+ DCs and CD8+CD11c+ DCs, and promoted antigen-specific Th1 responses and cytotoxic T lymphocyte (CTL) responses. The reduced tumor volume and weight as well as increased tumor inhibition rate were observed in PLGA/PEI-pPD-L1/pDKK-1 vaccine co-immunization group, indicated that the vaccine could effectively inhibit the tumor growth of multiple myeloma. The anti-tumor activity of PLGA/PEI-pPD-L1/pDKK-1 vaccine was abrogated by CD8 cell depletion accompanied with the reduced percentages of CD8+CD11c+ DCs and CD8+ T cells in the spleen and TILs. These results indicated that the anti-tumor efficacy of PLGA/PEI-pPD-L1/pDKK-1 vaccine was required for CD8+CD11c+ DCs-mediated CD8+ T cell immunity responses. This vaccine strategy may represent a potential and promising approach for hematological malignancy treatment.

Authors
Shuli Guo, Pengli Xiao, Bo Li, Wanli Wang, Songyun Wang, Tao Lv, Xiaoyan Xu, Cong Chen, Lei Huang, Zhi Li, Li Tang, Liang Peng, Huirui Wang
Relevant Conditions

Multiple Myeloma