Abstract

Prostate cancer can undergo curative effects by radical prostatectomy or radical radiotherapy. However, the best treatment for more aggressive high-risk prostate cancer remains controversial. Insufficient infiltration capacity and dysfunction are commonly occurrences in engineered T lymphocytes expressing chimeric antigen receptor (CAR-T), characterizing cancer immunotherapy failure. We conducted this study to investigate whether the combinative application of docetaxel and PSMA-CAR-T cells could be a more effective treatment to prostate cancer. Expressions of prostate specific membrane antigen (PSMA) on prostate cancer cells were examined by Flow cytometry. The efficaciousness of PSMA-CAR-T was evaluated in vitro using ELISA and RTCA. The effect of intermixed therapy was assessed in vivo utilizing a human prostate cancer liver metastasis mouse model and a human prostate cancer cell xenograft mouse model. The outcome of cytokine discharge and cell killing assays demonstrated that PSMA-CAR-T cells have characteristic effector capacity against PSMA+ prostate cancer cells in vitro. Additionally, collaborative treatment of PSMA-CAR-T cells and docetaxel have cooperative efficacy in a mouse model of human prostate cancer. The merged strategy could be seen as an undeveloped avenue to augmenting adoptive CAR-T cell immunotherapy and mitigating the adverse side effects of chemotherapy. Cooperation of PSMA-specific CAR-T cells and the chemotherapy drug docetaxel can impressively ameliorate antitumor effectiveness against an installed metastatic human prostate cancer model in NPG mice.

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