Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
5530165 | Translational Oncology | 2017 | 10 Pages |
BACKGROUND: Immunotherapy using dendritic cell (DC) vaccine has the potential to overcome the bottleneck of cancer therapy. METHODS: We engineered Lewis lung cancer cells (LLCs) and bone marrow-derived DCs to express tumor-associated antigen (TAA) ovalbumin (OVA) via lentiviral vector plasmid encoding OVA gene. We then tested the antitumor effect of modified DCs both in vitro and in vivo. RESULTS: The results demonstrated that in vitro modified DCs could dramatically enhance T-cell proliferation (PÂ <Â .01) and killing of LLCs than control groups (PÂ <Â .05). Moreover, modified DCs could reduce tumor size and prolong the survival of LLC tumor-bearing mice than control groups (PÂ <Â .01 and PÂ <Â .01, respectively). Mechanistically, modified DCs demonstrated enhanced homing to T-cell-rich compartments and triggered more naive T cells to become cytotoxic T lymphocytes, which exhibited significant infiltration into the tumors. Interestingly, modified DCs also markedly reduced tumor cells harboring stem cell markers in mice (PÂ <Â .05), suggesting the potential role on cancer stem-like cells. CONCLUSION: These findings suggested that DCs bioengineered with TAA could enhance antitumor effect and therefore represent a novel anticancer strategy that is worth further exploration.