A Pan-Inhibitor of DASH Family Enzymes Induces Immune-mediated Regression of Murine Sarcoma and Is a Potent Adjuvant to Dendritic Cell Vaccination and Adoptive T-cell Therapy JOURNAL OF IMMUNOTHERAPY Duncan, B. B., Highfill, S. L., Qin, H., Bouchkouj, N., Larabee, S., Zhao, P., Woznica, I., Liu, Y., Li, Y., Wu, W., Lai, J. H., Jones, B., Mackall, C. L., Bachovchin, W. W., Fry, T. J. 2013; 36 (8): 400-411

Abstract

Multimodality therapy consisting of surgery, chemotherapy, and radiation will fail in approximately 40% of patients with pediatric sarcomas and result in substantial long-term morbidity in those who are cured. Immunotherapeutic regimens for the treatment of solid tumors typically generate antigen-specific responses too weak to overcome considerable tumor burden and tumor suppressive mechanisms and are in need of adjuvant assistance. Previous work suggests that inhibitors of DASH (dipeptidyl peptidase IV activity and/or structural homologs) enzymes can mediate tumor regression by immune-mediated mechanisms. Herein, we demonstrate that the DASH inhibitor, ARI-4175, can induce regression and eradication of well-established solid tumors, both as a single agent and as an adjuvant to a dendritic cell (DC) vaccine and adoptive cell therapy (ACT) in mice implanted with the M3-9-M rhabdomyosarcoma cell line. Treatment with effective doses of ARI-4175 correlated with recruitment of myeloid (CD11b) cells, particularly myeloid DCs, to secondary lymphoid tissues and with reduced frequency of intratumoral monocytic (CD11bLy6-CLy6-G) myeloid-derived suppressor cells. In immunocompetent mice, combining ARI-4175 with a DC vaccine or ACT with tumor-primed T cells produced significant improvements in tumor responses against well-established M3-9-M tumors. In M3-9-M-bearing immunodeficient (Rag1) mice, ACT combined with ARI-4175 produced greater tumor responses and significantly improved survival compared with either treatment alone. These studies warrant the clinical investigation of ARI-4175 for treatment of sarcomas and other malignancies, particularly as an adjuvant to tumor vaccines and ACT.

View details for DOI 10.1097/CJI.0b013e3182a80213

View details for Web of Science ID 000324623100002

View details for PubMedID 23994886