Detalle Publicación

Cold-Inducible RNA Binding Protein as a Vaccination Platform to Enhance Immunotherapeutic Responses Against Hepatocellular Carcinoma

Título de la revista: CANCERS
ISSN: 2072-6694
Volumen: 12
Número: 11
Páginas: 3397
Fecha de publicación: 2020
Resumen:
Current immunotherapies based on blockade of immunosuppressive elements provide limited results in liver cancer patients. Here we tested whether combination of this therapy with a vaccine based on the Cold-Inducible RNA Binding Protein (CIRP) would improve its efficacy. Combination of immunotherapy with a CIRP-based vaccine increased vaccine immunogenicity and, when tested in several mouse models of liver cancer, resulted in better therapeutic effects. Despite good immune responses observed in peripheral organs, lymphocytes infiltrating the tumor appeared exhausted, with a weak functional capacity. Finally, by using the same strategy, we prepared a new CIRP-based vaccine containing glypican-3, human antigen commonly found in patients with liver cancer. An equivalent combination enclosing this new vaccine was also highly immunogenic. This suggests that CIRP-based vaccines may enhance the beneficial effects provided by current immunotherapies. However, they should also consider incorporating new elements to overcome limitations observed in tumor lymphocytes. Therapies based on immune checkpoint inhibitors (ICPI) have yielded promising albeit limited results in patients with hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC). Vaccines have been proposed as combination partners to enhance response rates to ICPI. Thus, we analyzed the combined effect of a vaccine based on the TLR4 ligand cold-inducible RNA binding protein (CIRP) plus ICPI. Mice were immunized with vaccines containing ovalbumin linke