Combined Rho-kinase inhibition and immunogenic cell death triggers and propagates immunity against cancer

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Abstract

Activation of T cell immune response is critical for the therapeutic efficacy of cancer immunotherapy. Current immunotherapies have shown remarkable clinical success against several cancers; however, significant responses remain restricted to a minority of patients. Here, we show a therapeutic strategy that combines enhancing the phagocytic activity of antigen-presenting cells with immunogenic cell death to trigger efficient antitumour immunity. Rho-kinase (ROCK) blockade increases cancer cell phagocytosis and induces antitumour immunity through enhancement of T cell priming by dendritic cells (DCs), leading to suppression of tumour growth in syngeneic tumour models. Combining ROCK blockade with immunogenic chemotherapy leads to increased DC maturation and synergistic CD8+ cytotoxic T cell priming and infiltration into tumours. This therapeutic strategy effectively suppresses tumour growth and improves overall survival in a genetic mouse mammary tumour virus/Neu tumour model. Collectively, these results suggest that boosting intrinsic cancer immunity using immunogenic killing and enhanced phagocytosis is a promising therapeutic strategy for cancer immunotherapy.

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Nam, G. H., Lee, E. J., Kim, Y. K., Hong, Y., Choi, Y., Ryu, M. J., … Kim, I. S. (2018). Combined Rho-kinase inhibition and immunogenic cell death triggers and propagates immunity against cancer. Nature Communications, 9(1). https://doi.org/10.1038/s41467-018-04607-9

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