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1.
Sci Transl Med ; 14(637): eabc1600, 2022 03 23.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35320003

ABSTRACT

Pancreatic ductal adenocarcinoma (PDAC) is a highly metastatic disease. Tumors are poorly immunogenic and immunosuppressive, preventing T cell activation in the tumor microenvironment. Here, we present a microbial-based immunotherapeutic treatment for selective delivery of an immunogenic tetanus toxoid protein (TT856-1313) into PDAC tumor cells by attenuated Listeria monocytogenes. This treatment reactivated preexisting TT-specific memory T cells to kill infected tumor cells in mice. Treatment of KrasG12D,p53R172H, Pdx1-Cre (KPC) mice with Listeria-TT resulted in TT accumulation inside tumor cells, attraction of TT-specific memory CD4 T cells to the tumor microenvironment, and production of perforin and granzyme B in tumors. Low doses of gemcitabine (GEM) increased immune effects of Listeria-TT, turning immunologically cold into hot tumors in mice. In vivo depletion of T cells from Listeria-TT + GEM-treated mice demonstrated a CD4 T cell-mediated reduction in tumor burden. CD4 T cells from TT-vaccinated mice were able to kill TT-expressing Panc-02 tumor cells in vitro. In addition, peritumoral lymph node-like structures were observed in close contact with pancreatic tumors in KPC mice treated with Listeria-TT or Listeria-TT + GEM. These structures displayed CD4 and CD8 T cells producing perforin and granzyme B. Whereas CD4 T cells efficiently infiltrated the KPC tumors, CD8 T cells did not. Listeria-TT + GEM treatment of KPC mice with advanced PDAC reduced tumor burden by 80% and metastases by 87% after treatment and increased survival by 40% compared to nontreated mice. These results suggest that Listeria-delivered recall antigens could be an alternative to neoantigen-mediated cancer immunotherapy.


Subject(s)
Carcinoma, Pancreatic Ductal , Listeria , Pancreatic Neoplasms , Animals , Carcinoma, Pancreatic Ductal/pathology , Cell Death , Disease Models, Animal , Mice , Pancreatic Neoplasms/drug therapy , Tetanus Toxoid/therapeutic use , Tumor Microenvironment
2.
Photochem Photobiol ; 96(2): 365-372, 2020 03.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31820435

ABSTRACT

In this study, we evaluate the use of riboflavin-mediated collagen photocrosslinking as an experimental tool to modulate extracellular matrix (ECM) mechanical properties in 3D in vitro tumor models. Using this approach in conjunction with 3D pancreatic tumor spheroid transplants, we show that the extent of matrix photocrosslinking in reconstituted hydrogels with fixed protein concentration scales inversely with the extent of invasive progression achieved by cells infiltrating into the surrounding ECM from primary transplanted spheroids. Using cross-linking to manipulate the extent of invasion into ECM in conjunction with imaging-based treatment assessment, we further leverage this approach as a means for assaying differential therapeutic response in primary nodule and ECM-invading populations and compare response to verteporfin-based photodynamic therapy (PDT) and oxaliplatin chemotherapy. Treatment response data shows that invading cell populations (which also exhibit markers of increased EMT) are highly chemoresistant yet have significantly increased sensitivity to PDT relative to the primary nodule. In contrast, the oxaliplatin treatment achieves greater growth inhibition of the primary nodule. These findings may be significant in themselves, while the methodology developed here could have a broader range of applications in developing strategies to target invasive disease and/or mecahanobiological determinants of therapeutic response in solid tumors.


Subject(s)
Extracellular Matrix/drug effects , Models, Biological , Neoplasm Invasiveness/prevention & control , Pancreatic Neoplasms/pathology , Photochemotherapy/methods , Riboflavin/pharmacology , Cell Line, Tumor , Extracellular Matrix/pathology , Humans , Pancreatic Neoplasms/drug therapy , Photosensitizing Agents/therapeutic use , Rheology , Verteporfin/therapeutic use
3.
J Vis Exp ; (148)2019 06 26.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31305525

ABSTRACT

The most common cause of cancer related mortality is metastasis, a process that requires dissemination of cancer cells from the primary tumor to secondary sites. Recently, we established that cancer cell dissemination in primary breast cancer and at metastatic sites in the lung occurs only at doorways called Tumor MicroEnvironment of Metastasis (TMEM). TMEM doorway number is prognostic for distant recurrence of metastatic disease in breast cancer patients. TMEM doorways are composed of a cancer cell which over-expresses the actin regulatory protein Mena in direct contact with a perivascular, proangiogenic macrophage which expresses high levels of TIE2 and VEGF, where both of these cells are tightly bound to a blood vessel endothelial cell. Cancer cells can intravasate through TMEM doorways due to transient vascular permeability orchestrated by the joint activity of the TMEM-associated macrophage and the TMEM-associated Mena-expressing cancer cell. In this manuscript, we describe two methods for assessment of TMEM-mediated transient vascular permeability: intravital imaging and fixed tissue immunofluorescence. Although both methods have their advantages and disadvantages, combining the two may provide the most complete analyses of TMEM-mediated vascular permeability as well as microenvironmental prerequisites for TMEM function. Since the metastatic process in breast cancer, and possibly other types of cancer, involves cancer cell dissemination via TMEM doorways, it is essential to employ well established methods for the analysis of the TMEM doorway activity. The two methods described here provide a comprehensive approach to the analysis of TMEM doorway activity, either in naïve or pharmacologically treated animals, which is of paramount importance for pre-clinical trials of agents that prevent cancer cell dissemination via TMEM.


Subject(s)
Breast Neoplasms/pathology , Capillary Permeability , Intravital Microscopy , Tissue Fixation , Tumor Microenvironment , Animals , Breast Neoplasms/blood supply , Cell Line, Tumor , Female , Humans , Mice , Neoplasm Metastasis , Neoplasm Recurrence, Local/pathology
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