Abstract
The acidic tumor microenvironment stands as a major obstacle to the efficient elimination of tumor cells. Norcantharidin (NCTD) is a powerful antitumor agent with multiple bioactivities. However, the effect of NCTD under acidic conditions is still unclear. Here, we report that NCTD can efficiently kill bladder cancer (BC) cells in acidic culture, and more intriguingly, NCTD can induce immunogenic cell death (ICD), thereby promoting antitumor immunity. In NCTD-treated BC cells, the surface-exposed calreticulin (ecto-CALR) was significantly increased. Consistently, co-culture with these cells promoted dendritic cell (DC) maturation. The NCTD-induced ICD is autophagy dependent, as autophagy inhibition completely blocked the NCTD-induced ecto-CALR and DC maturation. In addition, the DC showed a distinct maturation phenotype (CD80high CD86low) in acidic culture, as compared to that in physiological pH (CD80 high CD86high). Finally, the NCTD-induced ICD was validated in a mouse model. NCTD treatment significantly increased the tumor-infiltrating T lymphocytes in MB49 bladder cancer mice. Immunizing mice with NCTD-treated MB49 cells significantly increased tumor-free survival as compared to control. These findings demonstrate that NCTD could induce ICD in an acidic environment and suggest the feasibility to combine NCTD with anticancer immunotherapy to treat BC.
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