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  3. BCG hydrogel promotes CTSS-mediated antigen processing and presentation, thereby suppressing metastasis and prolonging survival in melanoma.
 

BCG hydrogel promotes CTSS-mediated antigen processing and presentation, thereby suppressing metastasis and prolonging survival in melanoma.

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BORIS DOI
10.48350/170849
Publisher DOI
10.1136/jitc-2021-004133
PubMed ID
35732347
Description
BACKGROUND

The use of intralesional Mycobacterium bovis BCG (intralesional live BCG) for the treatment of metastatic melanoma resulted in regression of directly injected, and occasionally of distal lesions. However, intralesional-BCG is less effective in patients with visceral metastases and did not significantly improve overall survival.

METHODS

We generated a novel BCG lysate and developed it into a thermosensitive PLGA-PEG-PLGA hydrogel (BCG hydrogel), which was injected adjacent to the tumor to assess its antitumor effect in syngeneic tumor models (B16F10, MC38). The effect of BCG hydrogel treatment on contralateral tumors, lung metastases, and survival was assessed to evaluate systemic long-term efficacy. Gene expression profiles of tumor-infiltrating immune cells and of tumor-draining lymph nodes from BCG hydrogel-treated mice were analyzed by single-cell RNA sequencing (scRNA-seq) and CD8+ T cell receptor (TCR) repertoire diversity was assessed by TCR-sequencing. To confirm the mechanistic findings, RNA-seq data of biopsies obtained from in-transit cutaneous metastases of patients with melanoma who had received intralesional-BCG therapy were analyzed.

RESULTS

Here, we show that BCG lysate exhibits enhanced antitumor efficacy compared to live mycobacteria and promotes a proinflammatory tumor microenvironment and M1 macrophage (MΦ) polarization in vivo. The underlying mechanisms of BCG lysate-mediated tumor immunity are dependent on MΦ and dendritic cells (DCs). BCG hydrogel treatment induced systemic immunity in melanoma-bearing mice with suppression of lung metastases and improved survival. Furthermore, BCG hydrogel promoted cathepsin S (CTSS) activity in MΦ and DCs, resulting in enhanced antigen processing and presentation of tumor-associated antigens. Finally, BCG hydrogel treatment was associated with increased frequencies of melanoma-reactive CD8+ T cells. In human patients with melanoma, intralesional-BCG treatment was associated with enhanced M1 MΦ, mature DC, antigen processing and presentation, as well as with increased CTSS expression which positively correlated with patient survival.

CONCLUSIONS

These findings provide mechanistic insights as well as rationale for the clinical translation of BCG hydrogel as cancer immunotherapy to overcome the current limitations of immunotherapies for the treatment of patients with melanoma.
Date of Publication
2022-06
Publication Type
article
Subject(s)
500 - Science::570 - Life sciences; biology
600 - Technology::610 - Medicine & health
Keyword(s)
antigen presentation dendritic cells immunotherapy macrophages melanoma
Language(s)
en
Contributor(s)
Kremenovic, Mirelaorcid-logo
Institut für Pathologie, Tumorpathologie
Chan, Alfred A
Feng, Bing
Bäriswyl, Lukas
Institut für Pathologie
Robatel, Steve Jacquy
Institut für Pathologie, Tumorpathologie
Institut für Pathologie
Gruber, Thomasorcid-logo
Institut für Pathologie
Tang, Li
Lee, Delphine J
Schenk, Mirjamorcid-logo
Institut für Pathologie, Tumorpathologie
Institut für Pathologie
Additional Credits
Institut für Pathologie, Tumorpathologie
Institut für Pathologie
Series
Journal for immunotherapy of cancer
Publisher
BioMed Central
ISSN
2051-1426
Access(Rights)
open.access
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