Jensen Jeffrey Lee, Rakhmilevich Alexander, Heninger Erika, Broman Aimee Teo, Hope Chelsea, Phan Funita, Miyamoto Shigeki, Maroulakou Ioanna, Callander Natalie, Hematti Peiman, Chesi Marta, Bergsagel P Leif, Sondel Paul, Asimakopoulos Fotis
Department of Medicine, Division of Hematology/Oncology, University of Wisconsin-Madison School of Medicine and Public Health, Madison, Wisconsin. University of Wisconsin Carbone Cancer Center, Madison, Wisconsin.
University of Wisconsin Carbone Cancer Center, Madison, Wisconsin. Department of Human Oncology, University of Wisconsin-Madison, Madison, Wisconsin.
Cancer Immunol Res. 2015 Aug;3(8):881-90. doi: 10.1158/2326-6066.CIR-15-0025-T. Epub 2015 May 4.
Myeloma remains a virtually incurable malignancy. The inevitable evolution of multidrug-resistant clones and widespread clonal heterogeneity limit the potential of traditional and novel therapies to eliminate minimal residual disease (MRD), a reliable harbinger of relapse. Here, we show potent anti-myeloma activity of macrophage-activating immunotherapy (αCD40+CpG) that resulted in prolongation of progression-free survival (PFS) and overall survival (OS) in an immunocompetent, preclinically validated, transplant-based model of multidrug-resistant, relapsed/refractory myeloma (t-Vκ*MYC). αCD40+CpG was effective in vivo in the absence of cytolytic natural killer, T, or B cells and resulted in expansion of M1-polarized (cytolytic/tumoricidal) macrophages in the bone marrow. Moreover, we show that concurrent loss/inhibition of Tpl2 kinase (Cot, Map3k8), a MAP3K that is recruited to activated CD40 complex and regulates macrophage activation/cytokine production, potentiated direct, ex vivo anti-myeloma tumoricidal activity of αCD40+CpG-activated macrophages, promoted production of antitumor cytokine IL12 in vitro and in vivo, and synergized with αCD40+CpG to further prolong PFS and OS in vivo. Our results support the combination of αCD40-based macrophage activation and TPL2 inhibition for myeloma immunotherapy. We propose that αCD40-mediated activation of innate antitumor immunity may be a promising approach to control/eradicate MRD following cytoreduction with traditional or novel anti-myeloma therapies.
多发性骨髓瘤仍然是一种几乎无法治愈的恶性肿瘤。多药耐药克隆的不可避免演变和广泛的克隆异质性限制了传统和新型疗法消除微小残留病(MRD)的潜力,而MRD是复发的可靠预兆。在此,我们展示了巨噬细胞激活免疫疗法(αCD40+CpG)具有强大的抗骨髓瘤活性,在一个具有免疫活性、经过临床前验证的、基于移植的多药耐药、复发/难治性骨髓瘤(t-Vκ*MYC)模型中,该疗法可延长无进展生存期(PFS)和总生存期(OS)。αCD40+CpG在缺乏细胞溶解性自然杀伤细胞、T细胞或B细胞的情况下在体内有效,并导致骨髓中M1极化(细胞溶解性/杀肿瘤性)巨噬细胞的扩增。此外,我们表明,Tpl2激酶(Cot,Map3k8)是一种被招募到活化的CD40复合物并调节巨噬细胞活化/细胞因子产生的丝裂原活化蛋白激酶3(MAP3K),同时缺失/抑制该激酶可增强αCD40+CpG激活的巨噬细胞的直接体外抗骨髓瘤杀肿瘤活性,促进体内外抗肿瘤细胞因子IL12的产生,并与αCD40+CpG协同作用,进一步延长体内的PFS和OS。我们的结果支持将基于αCD40的巨噬细胞激活与TPL2抑制相结合用于骨髓瘤免疫治疗。我们提出,αCD40介导的先天抗肿瘤免疫激活可能是一种有前景的方法,用于在采用传统或新型抗骨髓瘤疗法进行细胞减灭后控制/根除MRD。