Abstract 60P
Background
Personalized immunotherapy has proven to be crucial in the treatment of tumors with high genetic heterogeneity. Neoantigens derived from tumor mutations allow for precise immune activation. This study addresses the use of exosomes derived from dendritic cells pulsed with neoantigens in co-culture to enhance immune response. The combination of neoantigens and pulsing in dendritic cells optimizes immune activation, laying new therapeutic groundwork in cancer treatment.
Methods
Exosomes were generated from dendritic cells subjected to co-culture with pulsing using tumor-specific neoantigens. Exosomes were characterized by Nanosight, with an average size of 104.7 ± 10.3 nm and concentration of 7.15 x 10ˆ9 particles/mL. The presence of the exosomal markers CD63, CD81 and Alix was confirmed by Western blot. To evaluate the efficacy of coculture and dendritic cell pulsing, Native T cell activation was measured by flow cytometry (CD69 and CD25), proinflammatory cytokine production (IFN-γ, IL-6, TNF-α) by ELISA and Cytometric Bead Array, and apoptosis induction in tumor cells by lactate dehydrogenase (LDH) release.
Results
Native T cell activation showed an increase of 50.7% (95% CI: 48.2-53.1%) in cultures treated with pulsed dendritic cell-derived exosomes. IFN-γ production increased by 55.4% (95% CI: 53.6-57.2%), IL-6 by 49.8% (95% CI: 47.9-51.7%) and TNF-α by 30.5% (95% CI: 28.8-32.1%). The apoptosis rate in treated tumor cells increased by 34.7% (95% CI: 32.4-36.8%) and LDH release increased by 31.9% (95% CI: 29.7-33.5%) versus controls. The results indicate an effective immune activation.
Conclusions
This study demonstrates that exosomes derived from neoantigen-pulsed dendritic cells in coculture have great potential to activate specific immune responses and modify the tumor microenvironment. The observed increases in T cell activation, cytokine production and apoptosis suggest that this strategy can be successfully applied in personalized cancer immunotherapy, particularly in tumors resistant to conventional therapies. Further clinical studies are recommended to validate these results.
Legal entity responsible for the study
Orlando Global R&D LLC.
Funding
Biotech Foundation.
Disclosure
All authors have declared no conflicts of interest.
Resources from the same session
43P - Machine learning radiomics based on CT to predict response to lenvatinib plus tislelizumab based therapy for unresectable hepatocellular carcinoma
Presenter: Gang Chen
Session: Poster Display session
Resources:
Abstract
44P - Machine learning-based prediction of survival in patients with metastatic renal cell carcinoma receiving first-line immunotherapy
Presenter: Ahmed Elgebaly
Session: Poster Display session
Resources:
Abstract
45P - Gut microbiome signatures for exploring the correlation between gut microbiome and immune therapy response using machine learning approach
Presenter: Han Li
Session: Poster Display session
Resources:
Abstract
46P - Abnormal gut microbiota may cause PD-1 inhibitor-related cardiotoxicity via suppressing regulatory T cells
Presenter: Zeeshan Afzal
Session: Poster Display session
Resources:
Abstract
47P - Correlation of clinical, genetic and transcriptomic traits with PD-L1 positivity in TNBC patients
Presenter: Anita Semertzidou
Session: Poster Display session
Resources:
Abstract
48P - The A2AR antagonist inupadenant promotes humoral responses in preclinical models
Presenter: Paola Tieppo
Session: Poster Display session
Resources:
Abstract
49P - Highly potent novel armoured IL13Ra2 CAR T cell targeting glioblastoma
Presenter: Maurizio Mangolini
Session: Poster Display session
Resources:
Abstract
50P - Phase I trial of P-MUC1C-ALLO1 allogeneic CAR-T cells in advanced epithelial malignancies
Presenter: David Oh
Session: Poster Display session
Resources:
Abstract
51P - Unlocking CAR-T cell potential: Lipid metabolites in overcoming exhaustion in ovarian cancer
Presenter: Xiangyu Chang
Session: Poster Display session
Resources:
Abstract
52P - Tumor-targeted cytokine release by genetically-engineered myeloid cells rescues CAR-T activity and engages endogenous T cells against high-grade glioma in mouse models
Presenter: Federico Rossari
Session: Poster Display session
Resources:
Abstract