We investigated whether destroying malignant cells and the associated tumor microenvironment (TME) by focal gene therapy would broaden immune checkpoint inhibitor (ICI) effectiveness. We show that ICI antitumor activity against syngeneic (murine) triple-negative breast cancer (TNBC) was augmented when a therapeutic transgene (purine nucleoside phosphorylase, referred to here as E. coli PNP) was used to cleave fludarabine (2-fluoro-arabinofuranosyl adenine) to the anticancer purine base, 2-fluoroadenine (F-Ade). We also established strong repression of anatomically distant, non-PNP-expressing tumors being treated by the same strategy. TNBC cytoreduction was associated with decreased intratumoral PD1+ Tregs, increased granzyme B+ NK cells, elevated MKI67+ T8 cells, and rapid immune clearance. Because F-Ade works by a mechanism that destroys quiescent neoplastic and supporting cells in the microenvironment, and since resistance to ICIs depends upon an intact TME, tumor killing by this approach offers a means to sensitize refractory malignancies to immune ablation and points to broad applicability against numerous cancer subtypes.
Regina Rab, Jeong S. Hong, Brendan L.C. Kinney, Nicole C. Schmitt, William B. Parker, Adrianna Westbrook, Kelsey B. Bennion, Mandy L. Ford, Douglas H. Weitzel, Paula L. Miliani de Marval, Eric J. Sorscher, Annette Ehrhardt
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