Abstract

The authors investigated the in vivo anti-tumor effect of intratumoral administration of bone marrow-derived dendritic cells (DCs) after chemotherapy using an oral fluoropyrimidine anti-cancer drug TS-1, and followed by immunotherapeutic agent OK-432, in two syngeneic tumor-bearing mouse models. Both in Meth-A fibrosarcoma-bearing BALB/c mice and in SCCVII-bearing C3H/HeN mice, 1 week of oral administration of TS-1 effected partial eradication of established tumors. Intratumoral injection of DCs and OK-432 caused only slight inhibition of the tumor growth. However, TS-1 administration followed by DCs and OK-432 resulted in a marked inhibition in the tumor growth and also contributed to a greater prolongation of survival. By the injection of DCs and OK-432 after TS-1 administration, a significant infiltration of immune cells, especially CD8+ T cells, was observed. Furthermore, the cytotoxic activities of tumor-infiltrating lymphocytes and draining lymph node cells against inoculated tumor cells were significantly increased by the therapy, while activities against nonspecific target cells were not. Cytotoxic memory T cells were also induced; the main effectors were MHC class I-restricted, CD8+ T cells. The same therapy was also applied to SCCVII-bearing C3H/HeJ mice in which the Toll-like receptor (TLR) 4 is mutated and its function impaired; no immunotherapeutic effect was observed in the TLR4-deficient mouse model. These findings suggest that the local DC therapy in combination with TS-1 and OK-432 may be a useful strategy for the treatment of solid tumors, and that TLR4 signaling is involved in the success of this therapy.

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