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  3. Optimized antiangiogenic reprogramming of the tumor microenvironment potentiates CD40 immunotherapy.
 

Optimized antiangiogenic reprogramming of the tumor microenvironment potentiates CD40 immunotherapy.

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BORIS DOI
10.7892/boris.146678
Date of Publication
January 7, 2020
Publication Type
Article
Division/Institute

Universitätsklinik fü...

Author
Kashyap, Abhishek S
Schmittnaegel, Martina
Rigamonti, Nicolò
Pais-Ferreira, Daniela
Mueller, Philipp
Buchi, Melanie
Ooi, Chia-Huey
Kreuzaler, Matthias
Hirschmann, Petra
Guichard, Alan
Rieder, Natascha
Bill, Ruben
Universitätsklinik für Medizinische Onkologie
Herting, Frank
Kienast, Yvonne
Dirnhofer, Stefan
Klein, Christian
Hoves, Sabine
Ries, Carola H
Corse, Emily
De Palma, Michele
Zippelius, Alfred
Subject(s)

600 - Technology::610...

Series
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America - PNAS
ISSN or ISBN (if monograph)
0027-8424
Publisher
National Academy of Sciences NAS
Language
English
Publisher DOI
10.1073/pnas.1902145116
PubMed ID
31889004
Uncontrolled Keywords

CD40 VEGFA angiogenes...

Description
Cancer immunotherapies are increasingly combined with targeted therapies to improve therapeutic outcomes. We show that combination of agonistic anti-CD40 with antiangiogenic antibodies targeting 2 proangiogenic factors, vascular endothelial growth factor A (VEGFA) and angiopoietin 2 (Ang2/ANGPT2), induces pleiotropic immune mechanisms that facilitate tumor rejection in several tumor models. On the one hand, VEGFA/Ang2 blockade induced regression of the tumor microvasculature while decreasing the proportion of nonperfused vessels and reducing leakiness of the remaining vessels. On the other hand, both anti-VEGFA/Ang2 and anti-CD40 independently promoted proinflammatory macrophage skewing and increased dendritic cell activation in the tumor microenvironment, which were further amplified upon combination of the 2 treatments. Finally, combined therapy provoked brisk infiltration and intratumoral redistribution of cytotoxic CD8+ T cells in the tumors, which was mainly driven by Ang2 blockade. Overall, these nonredundant synergistic mechanisms endowed T cells with improved effector functions that were conducive to more efficient tumor control, underscoring the therapeutic potential of antiangiogenic immunotherapy in cancer.
Handle
https://boris-portal.unibe.ch/handle/20.500.12422/37193
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pnas.201902145.pdfAdobe PDF2.57 MBAttribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives (CC BY-NC-ND 4.0)publishedOpen
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