Damia Tormo
University of Bonn
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Publication
Featured researches published by Damia Tormo.
Nature Medicine | 2008
Hendrik Poeck; Robert Besch; Cornelius Maihoefer; Marcel Renn; Damia Tormo; Svetlana Shulga Morskaya; Susanne Kirschnek; Evelyn Gaffal; Jennifer Landsberg; Johannes C. Hellmuth; Andreas Schmidt; David Anz; Michael Bscheider; Tobias Schwerd; Carola Berking; Carole Bourquin; Ulrich Kalinke; Elisabeth Kremmer; Hiroki Kato; Shizuo Akira; Rachel Meyers; Georg Häcker; Michael Neuenhahn; Dirk H. Busch; Jürgen Ruland; Simon Rothenfusser; Marco Prinz; Veit Hornung; Stefan Endres; Thomas Tüting
Genetic and epigenetic plasticity allows tumors to evade single-targeted treatments. Here we direct Bcl2-specific short interfering RNA (siRNA) with 5′-triphosphate ends (3p-siRNA) against melanoma. Recognition of 5′-triphosphate by the cytosolic antiviral helicase retinoic acid–induced protein I (Rig-I, encoded by Ddx58) activated innate immune cells such as dendritic cells and directly induced expression of interferons (IFNs) and apoptosis in tumor cells. These Rig-I–mediated activities synergized with siRNA-mediated Bcl2 silencing to provoke massive apoptosis of tumor cells in lung metastases in vivo. The therapeutic activity required natural killer cells and IFN, as well as silencing of Bcl2, as evidenced by rescue with a mutated Bcl2 target, by site-specific cleavage of Bcl2 messenger RNA in lung metastases and downregulation of Bcl-2 protein in tumor cells in vivo. Together, 3p-siRNA represents a single molecule–based approach in which Rig-I activation on both the immune- and tumor cell level corrects immune ignorance and in which gene silencing corrects key molecular events that govern tumor cell survival.
Cancer Cell | 2009
Damia Tormo; Agnieszka Checinska; Direna Alonso-Curbelo; Estela Cañón; Erica Riveiro-Falkenbach; Tonantzin G. Calvo; Lionel Larribere; Diego Megías; Francisca Mulero; Miguel A. Piris; Rupesh Dash; Paola M. Barral; José Luis Rodríguez-Peralto; Pablo L. Ortiz-Romero; Thomas Tüting; Paul B. Fisher; Maria S. Soengas
Inappropriate drug delivery, secondary toxicities, and persistent chemo- and immunoresistance have traditionally compromised treatment response in melanoma. Using cellular systems and genetically engineered mouse models, we show that melanoma cells retain an innate ability to recognize cytosolic double-stranded RNA (dsRNA) and mount persistent stress response programs able to block tumor growth, even in highly immunosuppressed backgrounds. The dsRNA mimic polyinosine-polycytidylic acid, coadministered with polyethyleneimine as carrier, was identified as an unanticipated inducer of autophagy downstream of an exacerbated endosomal maturation program. A concurrent activity of the dsRNA helicase MDA-5 driving the proapoptotic protein NOXA resulted in an efficient autodigestion of melanoma cells. These results reveal tractable links for therapeutic intervention among dsRNA helicases, endo/lysosomes, and apoptotic factors.
Journal of Gene Medicine | 2006
Etiena Basner-Tschakarjan; Evelyn Gaffal; Meredith O'Keeffe; Damia Tormo; Andreas Limmer; Hermann Wagner; Hubertus Hochrein; Thomas Tüting
Recombinant replication‐deficient adenoviral vectors (recAd) are attractive candidates for DNA vaccination approaches because they are able to activate the innate and adaptive immune systems. Here we explore the ability of recAd to transduce and activate subsets of dendritic cells, namely plasmacytoid dendritic cells (pDC) and conventional dendritic cells (cDC).
Cancer Research | 2006
Damia Tormo; Aleix Ferrer; Pilar Bosch; Evelyn Gaffal; Etiena Basner-Tschakarjan; Jörg Wenzel; Thomas Tüting
Malignant melanoma is an attractive model disease for the development of antigen-specific immunotherapy because many antigens recognized by tumor-specific T cells have been identified. In C57BL/6 mice, genetic immunization with recombinant adenovirus encoding xenogeneic human tyrosinase-related protein 2 (Ad-hTRP2) induces protective but not therapeutic cellular immunity against growth of transplanted B16 melanoma cells. Here, we additionally applied CpG DNA and synthetic double-stranded RNA, which activate the innate immune system via Toll-like receptors (TLR). Both adenoviral vaccination and peritumoral injections of TLR ligands were required for rejection of established B16 melanoma in the skin. To more closely mimic the clinical situation in patients with melanoma, we evaluated this combined immunotherapeutic strategy in genetically modified mice, which overexpress hepatocyte growth factor (HGF) and carry an oncogenic mutation in the cyclin-dependent kinase 4 (CDK4)(R24C). HGF x CDK4(R24C) mice rapidly develop multiple invasive melanomas in the skin following neonatal carcinogen treatment, which spontaneously metastasize to lymph nodes and lungs. Vaccination with Ad-hTRP2 followed by injections of TLR ligands resulted in delayed growth of autochthonous primary melanomas in the skin and reduction in the number of spontaneous lung metastases but did not induce tumor regression. Carcinogen-treated HGF x CDK4(R24C) mice bearing multiple autochthonous melanomas did not reject transplanted B16 melanoma despite treatment with Ad-hTRP2 and TLR ligands, suggesting the development of tumor immunotolerance. Further investigations in our novel genetic melanoma model may help to better understand the role of the immune system in the pathogenesis and treatment of this life-threatening disease.
Cancer Cell | 2014
Direna Alonso-Curbelo; Erica Riveiro-Falkenbach; Metehan Cifdaloz; Panagiotis Karras; Lisa Osterloh; Diego Megías; Estela Cañón; Tonantzin G. Calvo; David Olmeda; Gonzalo Gómez-López; Osvaldo Graña; Víctor Javier Sánchez-Arévalo Lobo; David G. Pisano; Hao-Wei Wang; Pablo L. Ortiz-Romero; Damia Tormo; Keith Hoek; José Luis Rodríguez-Peralto; Johanna A. Joyce; Maria S. Soengas
Although common cancer hallmarks are well established, lineage-restricted oncogenes remain less understood. Here, we report an inherent dependency of melanoma cells on the small GTPase RAB7, identified within a lysosomal gene cluster that distinguishes this malignancy from over 35 tumor types. Analyses in human cells, clinical specimens, and mouse models demonstrated that RAB7 is an early-induced melanoma driver whose levels can be tuned to favor tumor invasion, ultimately defining metastatic risk. Importantly, RAB7 levels and function were independent of MITF, the best-characterized melanocyte lineage-specific transcription factor. Instead, we describe the neuroectodermal master modulator SOX10 and the oncogene MYC as RAB7 regulators. These results reveal a unique wiring of the lysosomal pathway that melanomas exploit to foster tumor progression.
Journal of Gene Medicine | 2006
Dirk Schweichel; Julia Steitz; Damia Tormo; Evelyn Gaffal; Aleix Ferrer; Stefanie Büchs; Petra Speuser; Andreas Limmer; Thomas Tüting
Recombinant DNA vaccines are able to induce strong CD8+ T cell mediated immunity and have become increasingly attractive for the prevention and treatment of infectious diseases and cancer. Dendritic cells (DC), which critically control cellular immune responses, have been transduced with antigen ex vivo and used as ‘natures adjuvant’ to enhance vaccine efficacy. The impact of the application route on the in vivo distribution of antigen and the stimulation of CD8+ T cells have been subjects of considerable debate. Here we report the construction of vectors expressing a fusion protein between EGFP, the H2‐Kb‐binding peptide OVAaa257−264 and green click beetle luciferase as a model antigen which allows for simultaneous quantitative assessment of antigen expression using fluorescence and bioluminescence imaging in correlation with CD8+ T cell stimulation in vivo. We applied this construct to evaluate DNA vaccination with recombinant adenoviral vectors, assess the impact of using cultured DC for vaccine delivery and investigate different application routes. Antigen expression was non‐invasively followed in vivo by visualizing bioluminescence with an ultrasensitive CCD camera. CD8+ T cell stimulation was detected with H2‐Kb‐OVAaa257−264 tetramers. We found that intravenous injection of adenovirus‐transduced DC stimulated the strongest OVAaa257−264‐specific cytotoxic T‐lymphocyte (CTL) responses although it delivered two orders of magnitude less antigen in vivo when compared to direct injection of recombinant adenovirus. We believe that our experimental approach has the potential to facilitate translational development of improved genetic immunization strategies targeting DC directly in vivo. Copyright
Cancer Gene Therapy | 2006
Julia Steitz; Damia Tormo; Dirk Schweichel; Thomas Tüting
Optimal strategies for antigen-specific melanoma vaccination are currently being defined in experimental mouse models. Using a single H2-Kb-binding peptide epitope derived from the melanosomal enzyme tyrosinase-related protein 2 (TRP2) in C57BL/6 mice, we show that adenovirus-transduced dendritic cells (DC) are clearly superior to peptide-pulsed DC for the induction of CD8+ T cells and antimelanoma immunity. Vaccine efficacy strictly depended on the presence of linked CD4+ T-cell help during the priming but not the effector phase of the immune response. These results provide important information for the translation of melanoma vaccine strategy in future clinical applications.
Handbook of experimental pharmacology | 2008
Joerg Wenzel; Damia Tormo; Thomas Tüting
This review will briefly cover some important aspects of skin structure and function before touching upon fundamental principles of neoplastic cell growth in the skin and some of the important molecular pathways involved. After presenting evidence for a role of the immune system in shaping the development of skin cancer, concepts for tumor immunotherapy with TLR-agonists are introduced from a historical point of view. Subsequently, the use of synthetic DNA, synthetic RNA and synthetic small immunostimulatory molecules for immunotherapy of early forms of epithelial carcinoma (actinic keratoses) and melanoma (lentigo maligna), as well as for advanced metastatic melanoma, is comprehensively presented. Finally, current developments and future prospects for immunotherapy of occult or unresectable melanoma metastastases, the most important clinical problem today, are discussed.
International Journal of Cancer | 2006
Julia Steitz; Stefanie Büchs; Damia Tormo; Aleix Ferrer; Jörg Wenzel; Christoph Huber; Thomas Wölfel; Mariano Barbacid; Marcos Malumbres; Thomas Tüting
We evaluated the efficacy of a candidate melanoma vaccine approach in mice genetically prone to develop melanoma due to the introduction of an oncogenic mutation (R24C) in the germline sequence of the cyclin‐dependent kinase 4 (cdk4), a protein critically involved in cell cycle regulation. Melanomas were induced in cdk4‐mutant mice by chemical carcinogenesis and UVB irradiation. A genetic prime‐boost strategy targeting the clinically relevant differentiation antigen tyrosinase‐related protein 2 (TRP2) was performed which was able to stimulate a melanocyte‐specific cellular immune response associated with localized autoimmune vitiligo‐like depigmentation. However, significant destruction of carcinogen‐induced autochthonous melanocytic neoplasms in the skin was not observed following immunization. We provide evidence that autochthonous melanomas expressed TRP2 but not the MHC molecule H2‐Kb and are immunologically tolerated in the skin. Our results highlight the importance of assessing melanoma vaccines in genetic mouse models that more adequately represent the expected clinical situation in order to identify strategies, which eventually may be of benefit for melanoma patients.
Melanoma Research | 2006
Damia Tormo; A. Ferrer; P. Bosch; Evelyn Gaffal; E. Basner-Tschakarjan; Joerg Wenzel; T. T ting
Malignant melanoma is an attractive model disease for the development of antigen-specific immunotherapy because many antigens recognized by tumor-specific T cells have been identified. In C57BL/6 mice, genetic immunization with recombinant adenovirus encoding xenogeneic human tyrosinase-related protein 2 (Ad-hTRP2) induces protective but not therapeutic cellular immunity against growth of transplanted B16 melanoma cells. Here, we additionally applied CpG DNA and synthetic double-stranded RNA, which activate the innate immune system via Toll-like receptors (TLR). Both adenoviral vaccination and peritumoral injections of TLR ligands were required for rejection of established B16 melanoma in the skin. To more closely mimic the clinical situation in patients with melanoma, we evaluated this combined immunotherapeutic strategy in genetically modified mice, which overexpress hepatocyte growth factor (HGF) and carry an oncogenic mutation in the cyclin-dependent kinase 4 (CDK4)(R24C). HGF x CDK4(R24C) mice rapidly develop multiple invasive melanomas in the skin following neonatal carcinogen treatment, which spontaneously metastasize to lymph nodes and lungs. Vaccination with Ad-hTRP2 followed by injections of TLR ligands resulted in delayed growth of autochthonous primary melanomas in the skin and reduction in the number of spontaneous lung metastases but did not induce tumor regression. Carcinogen-treated HGF x CDK4(R24C) mice bearing multiple autochthonous melanomas did not reject transplanted B16 melanoma despite treatment with Ad-hTRP2 and TLR ligands, suggesting the development of tumor immunotolerance. Further investigations in our novel genetic melanoma model may help to better understand the role of the immune system in the pathogenesis and treatment of this life-threatening disease.