Nature reviews. CancerReview
undefined Apr 2025
Cytotoxic T cell immune responses against cancer crucially depend on the ability of a subtype of professional antigen-presenting cells termed conventional type 1 dendritic cells (cDC1s) to cross-present antigens. Cross-presentation comprises redirection of exogenous antigens taken from other cells to the major histocompatibility complex class I antigen-presenting machinery. In addition, once activated and having sensed viral moieties or T helper cell cooperation via CD40-CD40L interactions, cDC1s provide key co-stimulatory ligands and cytokines to mount and sustain CD8 T cell immune responses. This regulated process of cognate T cell activation is termed cross-priming. In cancer mouse models, CD8 T cell cross-priming by cDC1s is crucial for the efficacy of most, if not all, immunotherapy strategies. In patients with cancer, the presence and abundance of cDC1s in the tumour microenvironment is markedly associated with the level of T cell infiltration and responsiveness to immune checkpoint inhibitors. Therapeutic strategies to increase the numbers of cDC1s using FMS-like tyrosine kinase 3 ligand (FLT3L) and/or their activation status show evidence of efficacy in cancer mouse models and are currently being tested in initial clinical trials with promising results so far.
Competing interests: I.M. acknowledges grants from Roche, Alligator, Genmab, BMS, AstraZeneca, Pharmamar and Highlight Therapeutics, as well as consultancy fees from BMS, Roche, Genmab, Numab, F-Star, Pierre Fabre, Sanofi, Alligator, AstraZeneca, Curon, Pioneers, Bright Peaks and Pharmamar. M.E.R.-R. reports receiving research funding from Roche and Highlight Therapeutics and speaker’s bureau honoraria from BMS and ROCHE. The other authors declare no competing interests.
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