Abstract

Cancer is maintained by the activity of a rare population of self-renewing “cancer stem cells” (CSCs), which are resistant to conventional therapies. CSCs share several antigenic determinants with induced pluripotent stem cells (iPSCs) as well as embryonic stem cells (ESC). We show here that allogenic or autologous murine iPSCs, combined with a histone deacetylase inhibitor (HDACi), are able to elicit major anti-tumor responses in a model of highly aggressive triple-negative breast cancer. This immunotherapy strategy was effective in preventing tumor establishment and efficiently targeted CSCs by inducing extensive modifications of the tumor microenvironment. The anti-tumoral effect was correlated with the generation of CD4+, CD8+ T cells, and CD44+ CD62L- CCR7low CD127low T-effector memory cells, and the reduction of CD4+ CD25+FoxP3+ Tregs, Arg1+ CD11b+ Gr1+ and Arg1+ and CD11b+ Ly6+ myeloid-derived suppressor cell populations within the tumor. The anti-tumoral effect was associated with a reduction in metastatic dissemination and an improvement in the survival rate. These results demonstrate for the first time the clinical relevance of using an off-the-shelf allogeneic iPSC-based vaccine combined with an HDACi as a novel pan-cancer anti-cancer immunotherapy strategy against aggressive tumors with metastatic potential.

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