BackgroundPeritoneal carcinomatosis (PC) is a common and devastating manifestation of colon cancer and refractory to conventional anticancer therapeutics. During the peritoneal dissemination of colon cancer, peritoneal immunity is nullified by various mechanisms of immune evasion. Here, we employed the armed oncolytic vaccinia virus mJX-594 (JX) to rejuvenate the peritoneal antitumor immune responses in the treatment of PC.MethodsPC model of MC38 colon cancer was generated and intraperitoneally treated with JX and/or anti-programmed cell death protein 1 (PD-1) antibody. The peritoneal tumor burden, vascular leakage, and malignant ascites formation were then assessed. Tumors and peritoneal lavage cells were analyzed by flow cytometry, multiplex tissue imaging, and a NanoString assay.ResultsJX treatment effectively suppressed peritoneal cancer progression and malignant ascites formation. It also restored the peritoneal anticancer immunity by activating peritoneal dendritic cells (DCs) and CD8+ T cells. Moreover, JX selectively infected and killed peritoneal colon cancer cells and promoted the intratumoral infiltration of DCs and CD8+ T cells into peritoneal tumor nodules. JX reinvigorates anticancer immunity by reprogramming immune-related transcriptional signatures within the tumor microenvironment. Notably, JX cooperates with immune checkpoint inhibitors (ICIs), anti-programmed death-1, anti-programmed death-ligand 1, and anti-lymphocyte-activation gene-3 to elicit a stronger anticancer immunity that eliminates peritoneal metastases and malignant ascites of colon cancer compared with JX or ICI alone.ConclusionsIntraperitoneal immunotherapy with JX restores peritoneal anticancer immunity and potentiates immune checkpoint blockade to suppress PC and malignant ascites in colon cancer.
Previously we reported that brazilin, the main principle of Caesalpinia sappan, was able to improve the altered immune functions caused by halothane administration in mice. To elucidate the mechanisms of its immunomodulating activities, the effects of brazilin on the functions of T cells and splenic cellularity were investigated. Brazilin decreased splenic cellularity and IL-2 production which had been augmented in mice treated with halothane (21.5% in olive oil, 10 mmol/kg) for 4 consecutive days whereas the reduced expression of IL-2 receptors by ConA or standard IL-2 was increased by brazilin treatment. These data indicate that halothane induced a dysfunction of T cells resulting in abnormal immune responses and these altered immune functions might be improved mainly by affecting the function of T cells.
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