Photochemical
reactions can dramatically alter physical characteristics
of reacted molecules. In this study, we demonstrate that near-infrared
(NIR) light induces an axial ligand-releasing reaction, which dramatically
alters hydrophilicity of a silicon phthalocyanine derivative (IR700)
dye leading to a change in the shape of the conjugate and its propensity
to aggregate in aqueous solution. This photochemical reaction is proposed
as a major mechanism of cell death induced by NIR photoimmunotherapy
(NIR-PIT), which was recently developed as a molecularly targeted
cancer therapy. Once the antibody-IR700 conjugate is bound to its
target, activation by NIR light causes physical changes in the shape
of antibody antigen complexes that are thought to induce physical
stress within the cellular membrane leading to increases in transmembrane
water flow that eventually lead to cell bursting and necrotic cell
death.
Near-infrared photoimmunotherapy (NIR-PIT) induces immunogenic cell death but has mostly failed to induce durable antitumor responses in syngenic tumor mouse models. We hypothesized that adaptive immune resistance could be limiting durable responses after treatmemt with NIR-PIT. We investigated the effects of combining NIR-PIT targeting cell-surface CD44 and PD-1 blockade in multiple syngeneic tumor models. In two of three models, NIR-PIT monotherapy halted tumor growth, enhanced dendritic cell tumor infiltration, and induced de novo tumor antigenspecific T-cell responses absent at baseline. The addition of PD-1 blockade reversed adaptive immune resistance, resulting in both enhanced preexisting tumor antigenspecific T-cell responses and enhanced de novo T-cell responses induced by NIR-PIT. Enhanced immune responses correlated with shared tumor antigen expression, suggesting that antigenicity is a major determinant of response to combination NIR-PIT and PD-1 blockade. Combination treatment induced complete rejection of MC38 tumors treated with NIR-PIT, as well as untreated, distant tumors. Accordingly, tumor antigen-specific T-cell responses were measured in both treated and untreated tumors, validating the development of systemic antitumor immunity. Mice that cleared tumors resisted subsequent tumor challenge, indicating the presence of systemic immune memory. Cumulatively, these results demonstrate reversal of adaptive immune resistance following induction of innate and adaptive immunity by NIR-PIT, resulting in high rates of tumor rejection and/or significant tumor growth control in antigenic syngeneic models of cancer.
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