Abstract

The induction of immunogenic cell death (ICD) in cancer cells triggers specific immune responses against the same cancer cells. Imiquimod (IMQ) is a synthetic ligand of toll-like receptor 7 that exerts antitumor activity by stimulating cell-mediated immunity or by directly inducing apoptosis. Whether IMQ causes tumors to undergo ICD and elicits a specific antitumor immune response is unknown. We demonstrated that IMQ-induced ICD-associated features, including the surface exposure of calreticulin and the secretion of adenosine triphosphate and HMGB1, were mediated by ROS and endoplasmic reticulum stress. In a B16F10 melanoma mouse model, vaccinating mice with IMQ-induced ICD cell lysate or directly injecting IMQ in situ reduced tumor growth that was mediated by inducing tumor-specific T-cell proliferation, promoting tumor-specific cytotoxic killing by CD8+ T cells, and increasing the infiltration of various immune cells into tumor lesions. The ICD-associated features were crucial in the induction of specific antitumor immunity invivo. The glycolytic inhibitor 2-deoxyglucose enhanced IMQ-induced ICD-associated features and strengthened the antitumor immunity mediated by IMQ-induced ICD cell lysate in p53-mutant cancer cells, which were IMQ-resistant invitro. We conclude that IMQ is an authentic ICD inducer and provide a concept connecting IMQ-induced cancer cell death and antitumor immune responses.

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