Systemic anticancer chemotherapy is immunosuppressive and mostly induces nonimmunogenic tumor cell death. Here, we show that even in the absence of any adjuvant, tumor cells dying in response to anthracyclins can elicit an effective antitumor immune response that suppresses the growth of inoculated tumors or leads to the regression of established neoplasia. Although both antracyclins and mitomycin C induced apoptosis with caspase activation, only anthracyclin-induced immunogenic cell death was immunogenic. Caspase inhibition by Z-VAD-fmk or transfection with the baculovirus inhibitor p35 did not inhibit doxorubicin (DX)-induced cell death, yet suppressed the immunogenicity of dying tumor cells in several rodent models of neoplasia. Depletion of dendritic cells (DCs) or CD8+T cells abolished the immune response against DX-treated apoptotic tumor cells in vivo. Caspase inhibition suppressed the capacity of DX-killed cells to be phagocytosed by DCs, yet had no effect on their capacity to elicit DC maturation. Freshly excised tumors became immunogenic upon DX treatment in vitro, and intratumoral inoculation of DX could trigger the regression of established tumors in immunocompetent mice. These results delineate a procedure for the generation of cancer vaccines and the stimulation of anti-neoplastic immune responses in vivo.
Caspase-dependent immunogenicity of doxorubicin-induced tumor cell death
Abbreviations used: DX, doxorubicin; DXZ, DX combined with Z-VAD-fmk; F/T, frozen-thawed; MC, mitomycin C; TSA, murine mammary adenocarcinoma TS/A; TUNEL, terminal desoxyribonucleotidyl transferase dUTP nick end labeling.
N. Casares and M.O. Pequignot contributed equally to this work.
Noelia Casares, Marie O. Pequignot, Antoine Tesniere, François Ghiringhelli, Stéphan Roux, Nathalie Chaput, Elise Schmitt, Ahmed Hamai, Sandra Hervas-Stubbs, Michel Obeid, Frédéric Coutant, Didier Métivier, Evelyne Pichard, Pierre Aucouturier, Gérard Pierron, Carmen Garrido, Laurence Zitvogel, Guido Kroemer; Caspase-dependent immunogenicity of doxorubicin-induced tumor cell death . J Exp Med 19 December 2005; 202 (12): 1691–1701. doi: https://doi.org/10.1084/jem.20050915
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