Exceptional antineoplastic activity of a dendritic-cell-targeted vaccine loaded with a Listeria peptide proposed against metastatic melanoma

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Abstract

Vaccination with dendritic cells (DCs) is proposed to induce lasting responses against melanoma but its survival benefit in patients needs to be demonstrated. We propose a DC-targeted vaccine loaded with a Listeria peptide with exceptional anti-tumour activity to prevent metastasis of melanoma. Mice vaccinated with vaccines based on DCs loaded with listeriolysin O peptide (91-99) (LLO91-99) showed clear reduction of metastatic B16OVA melanoma size and adhesion, prevention of lung metastasis, enhanced survival, and reversion of immune tolerance. Robust innate and specific immune responses explained the efficiency of DC-LLO91-99 vaccines against B16OVA melanoma. The no Table features of this vaccine related to melanoma reduction were: expansion of immune-dominant LLO91-99-specific CD8 T cells that helped to expand melanoma-specific CD8+ T cells; high numbers of tumour-infiltrating lymphocytes with a cytotoxic phenotype; and a decrease in CD4+CD25high regulatory T cells. This vaccine might be a useful alternative treatment for advanced melanoma, alone or in combination with other therapies.

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Calderon-Gonzalez, R., Bronchalo-Vicente, L., Freire, J., Frande-Cabanes, E., Alaez-Alvarez, L., Gomez-Roman, J., … Alvarez-Dominguez, C. (2016). Exceptional antineoplastic activity of a dendritic-cell-targeted vaccine loaded with a Listeria peptide proposed against metastatic melanoma. Oncotarget, 7(13), 16855–16865. https://doi.org/10.18632/oncotarget.7806

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