1. Academic Validation
  2. CpG-based immunotherapy impairs antitumor activity of BRAF inhibitors in a B-cell-dependent manner

CpG-based immunotherapy impairs antitumor activity of BRAF inhibitors in a B-cell-dependent manner

  • Oncogene. 2017 Jul 13;36(28):4081-4086. doi: 10.1038/onc.2017.35.
L Huang 1 Z Wang 1 C Liu 1 C Xu 1 R M Mbofung 1 J A McKenzie 1 H Khong 1 P Hwu 1 W Peng 1
Affiliations

Affiliation

  • 1 Department of Melanoma Medical Oncology, University of Texas MD Anderson Cancer Center, Houston, TX, USA.
Abstract

Combining immunotherapy with targeted therapy has increasingly become an appealing therapeutic paradigm for Cancer treatment due to its great potential for generating durable and synergistic antitumor response. In this study, however, we unexpectedly found that two types of CpG-based tumor peptide vaccine treatments consistently negated the antitumor activity of a selective BRaf Inhibitor in tumors with BRaf mutation rather than showing a synergistic antitumor effect. Our further studies demonstrated that CpG alone was sufficient to dampen BRaf inhibitor-induced antitumor responses, suggesting that the impaired antitumor activity of the BRaf Inhibitor observed in mice receiving CpG-based peptide vaccine is mainly dependent upon the use of CpG. Mechanistically, CpG increased the number of circulating B cells, which produced elevated amounts of tumor necrosis factor-α (TNFα) that contributed to the increased tumor resistance to BRaf inhibitors. More importantly, B-cell depletion or TNFα neutralization can restore the antitumor effect of BRaf inhibition in mice receiving CpG treatment, indicating that TNFα-secreting B cells play an indispensable role in BRaf Inhibitor resistance induced by CpG. Taken together, our results strongly suggest that precautions must be implemented when designing combinatorial approaches for Cancer treatment, because distinct regimens, despite their respective therapeutic benefit as monotherapy, may together provide antagonistic clinical outcomes.

Figures