Clinical Grade Production of Wilms' Tumor-1 Loaded Cord Blood-Derived Dendritic Cells to Prevent Relapse in Pediatric AML After Cord Blood Transplantation

Publication date

2020-09-25

Authors

Plantinga, Maud
Lo Presti, Vania
de Haar, Colin G
Dunnebach, Ester
Madrigal, Alejandro
Lindemans, CarolineISNI 0000000388582537
Boelens, Jaap JanISNI 0000000396746028
Nierkens, StefanORCID 0000-0003-3406-817XISNI 0000000395421272

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Abstract

Hematopoietic cell transplantation (HCT) is a last resort, potentially curative treatment option for pediatric patients with refractory acute myeloid leukemia (AML). Cord blood transplantation (CBT) results in less relapses and less graft-versus-host disease when compared to other sources. Nevertheless, still more than half of the children die from relapses. We therefore designed a strategy to prevent relapses by inducing anti-AML immunity after CBT, using a CB-derived dendritic cell (CBDC) vaccine generated from CD34+ CB cells from the same graft. We here describe the optimization and validation of good manufacturing practice (GMP)-grade production of the CBDC vaccine. We show the feasibility of expanding low amounts of CD34+ cells in a closed bag system to sufficient DCs per patient for at least three rounds of vaccinations. The CBDCs showed upregulated costimulatory molecules after maturation and showed enhanced CCR7-dependent migration toward CCL19 in a trans-well migrations assay. CBDCs expressed Wilms' tumor 1 (WT1) protein after electroporation with WT1-mRNA, but were not as potent as CBDCs loaded with synthetic long peptides (peptivator). The WT1-peptivator loaded CBDCs were able to stimulate T-cells both in a mixed lymphocyte reaction as well as in an antigen-specific (autologous) setting. The autologous stimulated T-cells lysed not only the WT1+ cell line, but most importantly, also primary pediatric AML cells. Altogether, we provide a GMP-protocol of a highly mature CBDC vaccine, loaded with WT1 peptivator and able to stimulate autologous T-cells in an antigen-specific manner. Finally, these T-cells lysed primary pediatric AML demonstrating the competence of the CBDC vaccine strategy.

Keywords

cord blood, dendritic cells, good manufacturing practice, immunotherapy, transplantation, vaccine, Immunology and Allergy, Immunology, Journal Article

Citation

Plantinga, M, Lo Presti, V, de Haar, C G, Dünnebach, E, Madrigal, A, Lindemans, C A, Boelens, J J & Nierkens, S 2020, 'Clinical Grade Production of Wilms' Tumor-1 Loaded Cord Blood-Derived Dendritic Cells to Prevent Relapse in Pediatric AML After Cord Blood Transplantation', Frontiers in Immunology, vol. 11, 559152, pp. 1-13. https://doi.org/10.3389/fimmu.2020.559152