Reversing the highly immunosuppressive tumor microenvironment (TME) is essential to achieve long-term efficacy with cancer immunotherapy. Despite the impressive clinical response to checkpoint blockade in multiple types of cancer, only a minority of patients benefit from this approach. Here, we report that the oncolytic virus M1 induces immunogenic tumor cell death and subsequently restores the ability of dendritic cells to prime antitumor T cells. Intravenous injection of M1 disrupts immune tolerance in the privileged TME, reprogramming immune-silent (cold) tumors into immune-inflamed (hot) tumors. M1 elicits potent CD8+ T cell-dependent therapeutic effects and establishes long-term antitumor immune memory in poorly immunogenic tumor models. Pretreatment with M1 sensitizes refractory tumors to subsequent checkpoint blockade by boosting T-cell recruitment and upregulating the expression of PD-L1. These findings reveal the antitumor immunological mechanism of the M1 virus and indicated that oncolytic viruses are ideal cotreatments for checkpoint blockade immunotherapy.
Oncolytic virotherapies are perceived as remarkable immunotherapies coming into view and represent highly promising cancer treatments, yet to figure out its specific immune responses and underlying barriers remains critical. Albeit recent studies have demonstrated that oncolytic viruses (OVs) could fine tune tumor microenvironment (TME) to elicit tumor suppression mainly due to effective Tcell responses, the interaction between suppressive T cells and OVs is barely undetermined. Herein, we found that regulatory T cells (Treg cells) were increased in the TME following systemic administration of oncolytic virus M1 along with the higher expression of relative cytokines and chemokines in both mouse RM-1 prostatic carcinoma model and mouse B16F10 melanoma model. Besides, Treg cells expressed high levels of CD25 post-M1 treatment, and its suppressive effect on CD8 + T cells was also elevated. Depletion of Treg cells in M1-treated groups significantly reinforced antitumor effect of M1. Specific targeting of Treg cells using cytotoxic T lymphocyte-associated protein 4 (CTLA-4) antibody (Ab) in combination with M1 treatment elicited a more profound tumor suppression and longer overall survival time than M1 alone in both tumor models. Moreover, CTLA-4 Ab further aggrandized antitumor immune response elicited by M1, including increased infiltration of CD45 + immune cells and CD8 + or CD4 + T lymphocytes, decreased ratio of Treg cells to CD4 + T lymphocytes, the intensified lymphocytotoxicity and elevated secretion of cytotoxic cytokines like interferon-γ, granzyme B and perforin. Therefore, our findings constituted a suggestive evidence that targeting Treg cells in M1-based oncolytic virotherapy may achieve a highly response in clinical cancer research.
In the original version of Fig. 6, published on January 22, 2021, the names of image panels (row 2 to row 5) were mislabeled during figure layout. The corrected figure is shown below.The original article has been corrected.
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