Abstract
Intratumoral dendritic cells play an important role in stimulating cytotoxic T cells and driving antitumor immunity. Using a metastatic ovarian tumor model in syngeneic mice, we explored whether therapy with a CXCR4 antagonist-armed oncolytic vaccinia virus activates endogenous CD103(+) dendritic cell responses associated with the induction of adaptive immunity against viral and tumor antigens. The overall goal of this study was to determine whether expansion of CD103(+) dendritic cells by the virally delivered CXCR4 antagonist augments overall survival and in situ boosting with a tumor antigen peptide-based vaccine. We found that locoregional delivery of the CXCR4-A-armed virus reduced the tumor load and the immunosuppressive network in the tumor microenvironment, leading to infiltration of CD103(+) dendritic cells that were capable of phagocytic clearance of cellular material from virally infected cancer cells. Further expansion of tumor-resident CD103(+) DCs by injecting the FMS-related tyrosine kinase 3 ligand, the formative cytokine for CD103(+) DCs, provided a platform for a booster immunization with the Wilms tumor antigen 1 peptide-based vaccine delivered intraperitoneally with polyriboinosinic:polyribocytidylic acid as an adjuvant. The vaccine-induced antitumor responses inhibited tumor growth and increased overall survival, indicating that expansion of intratumoral CD103(+) dendritic cells by CXCR4-A-armed oncovirotherapy treatment can potentiate in situ cancer vaccine boosting.