Periodic Reporting for period 1 - DART (Driving tumour antigen presentation by RNA-mediated transdifferentiation)
Período documentado: 2024-08-01 hasta 2026-01-31
Experimental activities with industrial collaborators and clinicians were coupled with exploitation plans, ensuring commercialization through novel intellectual property, broad dissemination, and product development. Ultimately, this project would set the stage for a new, off-the-shelf, safe, and scalable immunotherapy solution that also has the potential to enhance current immunotherapy approaches.
All RNA platforms successfully induced cDC1 reprogramming, as illustrated by the upregulation of antigen-presentation markers HLA-ABC/MHC-I and CD40 across fibroblasts and cancer cell lines. Notably, circRNA induced enhanced reprogramming efficiencies, whereas srRNA promoted lower efficiency but more durable reprogramming.
In primary patient-derived tumor samples, particularly head and neck carcinomas, we observed the induction of antigen-presenting phenotypes and functional T cell activation, with circRNA-LNPs showing the most pronounced effects, as measured by IFN-γ production and CD69 upregulation following co-culture of T cells with reprogrammed cells.
Intratumoral injection of GFP-encoding RNAs formulated in LNPs into established MC38 colon carcinoma tumors enabled transgene expression within solid tumors in vivo, with circRNA exhibiting the most persistent expression compared to mRNA and srRNA. Furthermore, in situ reprogramming in xenograft models resulted in the upregulation of antigen-presentation and co-stimulatory markers in tumor cells, supporting the feasibility of RNA-mediated induction of tumor immunogenicity in vivo. Importantly, circRNA-reprogrammed tumors exhibited significantly delayed tumor growth and achieved complete tumor remission in a subset of animals, outperforming both mRNA and srRNA.
Collectively, these findings demonstrates that RNA-mediated cDC1 reprogramming induces anti-tumor immunity in vivo, paving the way for the development of a non-viral, scalable, and potentially safer immunotherapy strategy. Furthermore, we effectively disseminated and communicated the project’s outcomes, resulting in two peer-reviewed publications (with an additional manuscript currently under revision), as well as a published protocol on in vivo cDC1 reprogramming and presentations at international conferences. In parallel, our close collaboration with Asgard Therapeutics and clinical collaborators ensured strong innovation and exploitation outputs. This led to the submission of one provisional patent application, a comprehensive competitive landscape analysis, and a targeted search for potential partners to support future development. These efforts also enabled the establishment of an initial Target Product Profile for RNA-mediated in vivo reprogramming.
Moving forward, we will further validate this approach across additional tumor models and patient-derived samples, while also optimizing systemic RNA delivery strategies. Continued collaboration with Asgard Therapeutics, will support intellectual property protection, regulatory development, and advancement toward clinical translation.