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  5. DNA-Containing Exosomes Derived from Cancer Cells Treated with Topotecan Activate a STING-Dependent Pathway and Reinforce Antitumor Immunity

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Article
English
2017

DNA-Containing Exosomes Derived from Cancer Cells Treated with Topotecan Activate a STING-Dependent Pathway and Reinforce Antitumor Immunity

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English
2017
The Journal of Immunology
Vol 198 (4)
DOI: 10.4049/jimmunol.1601694

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Akira Shizuo
Akira Shizuo

Osaka University

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Yuichi Kitai
Takumi Kawasaki
Takuya Sueyoshi
+6 more

Abstract

Danger-associated molecular patterns derived from damaged or dying cells elicit inflammation and potentiate antitumor immune responses. In this article, we show that treatment of breast cancer cells with the antitumor agent topotecan (TPT), an inhibitor of topoisomerase I, induces danger-associated molecular pattern secretion that triggers dendritic cell (DC) activation and cytokine production. TPT administration inhibits tumor growth in tumor-bearing mice, which is accompanied by infiltration of activated DCs and CD8+ T cells. These effects are abrogated in mice lacking STING, an essential molecule in cytosolic DNA-mediated innate immune responses. Furthermore, TPT-treated cancer cells release exosomes that contain DNA that activate DCs via STING signaling. These findings suggest that a STING-dependent pathway drives antitumor immunity by responding to tumor cell-derived DNA.

How to cite this publication

Yuichi Kitai, Takumi Kawasaki, Takuya Sueyoshi, Kouji Kobiyama, Ken J. Ishii, Jian Zou, Akira Shizuo, Tadashi Matsuda, Taro Kawai (2017). DNA-Containing Exosomes Derived from Cancer Cells Treated with Topotecan Activate a STING-Dependent Pathway and Reinforce Antitumor Immunity. The Journal of Immunology, 198(4), pp. 1649-1659, DOI: 10.4049/jimmunol.1601694.

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Publication Details

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Article

Year

2017

Authors

9

Datasets

0

Total Files

0

Language

English

Journal

The Journal of Immunology

DOI

10.4049/jimmunol.1601694

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