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A vaccine targeting resistant tumours by dual T cell plus NK cell attack.

Authors :
Badrinath, Soumya
Dellacherie, Maxence O.
Li, Aileen
Zheng, Shiwei
Zhang, Xixi
Sobral, Miguel
Pyrdol, Jason W.
Smith, Kathryn L.
Lu, Yuheng
Haag, Sabrina
Ijaz, Hamza
Connor-Stroud, Fawn
Kaisho, Tsuneyasu
Dranoff, Glenn
Yuan, Guo-Cheng
Mooney, David J.
Wucherpfennig, Kai W.
Source :
Nature; Jun2022, Vol. 606 Issue 7916, p992-998, 7p
Publication Year :
2022

Abstract

Most cancer vaccines target peptide antigens, necessitating personalization owing to the vast inter-individual diversity in major histocompatibility complex (MHC) molecules that present peptides to T cells. Furthermore, tumours frequently escape T cell-mediated immunity through mechanisms that interfere with peptide presentation1. Here we report a cancer vaccine that induces a coordinated attack by diverse T cell and natural killer (NK) cell populations. The vaccine targets the MICA and MICB (MICA/B) stress proteins expressed by many human cancers as a result of DNA damage2. MICA/B serve as ligands for the activating NKG2D receptor on T cells and NK cells, but tumours evade immune recognition by proteolytic MICA/B cleavage3,4. Vaccine-induced antibodies increase the density of MICA/B proteins on the surface of tumour cells by inhibiting proteolytic shedding, enhance presentation of tumour antigens by dendritic cells to T cells and augment the cytotoxic function of NK cells. Notably, this vaccine maintains efficacy against MHC class I-deficient tumours resistant to cytotoxic T cells through the coordinated action of NK cells and CD4<superscript>+</superscript> T cells. The vaccine is also efficacious in a clinically important setting: immunization following surgical removal of primary, highly metastatic tumours inhibits the later outgrowth of metastases. This vaccine design enables protective immunity even against tumours with common escape mutations.A vaccine targeting stress proteins expressed by many cancers blocks a tumour escape mechanism, enabling protective immunity mediated by diverse T cell and NK cell populations. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
00280836
Volume :
606
Issue :
7916
Database :
Complementary Index
Journal :
Nature
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
157724602
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1038/s41586-022-04772-4