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Journal for Immunotherapy of Cancer logoLink to Journal for Immunotherapy of Cancer
. 2014 Nov 6;2(Suppl 3):P176. doi: 10.1186/2051-1426-2-S3-P176

Induction of systemic anti-melanoma immunity through intratumoral TLR-7/8 activation

Manisha Singh 1,, Hiep Khong 1, Zhimin Dai 1, John P Vasilakos 2, Patrick Hwu 1, Willem W Overwijk 1
PMCID: PMC4288567

Purpose

Intratumoral immune activation can induce systemic immunity and anti-tumor activity. Imiquimod is a cream-formulated, TLR-7 agonist that is FDA-approved for the treatment of non-melanoma skin cancers, but has limited activity against melanoma. In the current study, we studied the anti-tumor activity and mechanism of action of a novel injectable TLR 7/8 dual agonist, 3M-052, which remains at the site of injection to avoid systemic distribution.

Experimental design

Mice bearing established B16 melanomas were treated intratumorally with 3M-052 or vehicle. The mechanistic contribution of individual cell types and molecules to the anti-tumor effect was determined using genetically engineered mice and antibody blockades. Immune cell infiltrates were analyzed by flow cytometry.

Results

Intratumoral administration of 3M-052 generated systemic anti-tumor immunity and suppressed both injected and distant uninjected wild-type B16.F10 melanomas. Treated tumors showed increased level of CCL2 chemokines and CCL2 dependent infiltration of M1 phenotype-shifted macrophages which could kill tumor cells directly through production of nitric oxide. CD8+ T cells, B cells, Type I IFN, IFN-g, and pDCs contributed to efficient tumor suppression whereas perforin, NK cells and CD4 T cells were not required.

Conclusion

Induction of effective innate and tumor specific adaptive immunity by intratumoral treatment of TLR7/8 agonist, 3M-052 is a promising approach for the treatment of metastatic cancer.


Articles from Journal for Immunotherapy of Cancer are provided here courtesy of BMJ Publishing Group

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