Photodynamic therapy-generated vaccine for cancer therapy

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Abstract

A target tumor-derived whole cancer cell therapeutic vaccine was developed based on an in vitro pre-treatment by photodynamic therapy (PDT) and was investigated using a poorly immunogenic tumor model. The vaccine was produced by incubating in vitro expanded mouse squamous cell carcinoma SCCVII cells for 1 h with photosensitizer benzoporphyrin derivative (BPD), then exposing to light (690 nm, 1 J/cm2) and finally to a lethal X-ray dose. Treatment of established subcutaneous SCCVII tumors growing in syngeneic C3H/HeN mice with 2×107 PDT-vaccine cells per mouse by a peritumoral injection produced a significant therapeutic effect, including growth retardation, regression and cures. Tumor specificity of this PDT-generated vaccine was demonstrated by its ineffectiveness when prepared from a mismatched tumor cell line. Vaccine cells retrieved from the treatment site at 1 h postinjection were intermixed with dendritic cells (DC), exhibited heat shock protein 70 on their surface, and were opsonized by complement C3. Tumor-draining lymph nodes treated by the PDT-vaccine contained dramatically increased numbers of DC as well as B and T lymphocytes (with enlarged memory phenotype fraction in the latter), while high levels of surface-bound C3 were detectable on DC and to a lesser extent on B cells. The PDT-vaccine produced no therapeutic benefit against tumors growing in C3-deficient hosts. It is suggested that surface expression of heat shock proteins and complement opsonization are the two unique features of PDT-treated cells securing avid immune recognition of vaccinated tumor and the development of a strong and effective antitumor adaptive immune response. © Springer-Verlag 2005.

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APA

Korbelik, M., & Sun, J. (2006). Photodynamic therapy-generated vaccine for cancer therapy. Cancer Immunology, Immunotherapy, 55(8), 900–909. https://doi.org/10.1007/s00262-005-0088-4

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