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1.
In this report, we address whether a growing tumor provides sufficient inflammatory signals to promote activation, clonal expansion, and acquisition of effector functions by naive tumor-specific CD8(+) T lymphocytes. CD8(+) T lymphocytes obtained from hemagglutinin (HA)-specific clone 4 TCR-transgenic mice were injected into recipient mice that spontaneously develop pancreatic tumors expressing HA as a tumor-associated Ag (RIP-Tag2-HA mice). When 3 x 10(6) clone 4 CD8(+) T cells were transferred into tumor-bearing mice, the cells became activated in the pancreatic lymph nodes where they proliferated and acquired effector functions such as cytolytic activity and IFN-gamma production. Surprisingly, reducing the number of adoptively transferred CD8(+) T cells led to a parallel reduction in the proportion of the activated cells that exhibited effector functions, suggesting that CTL differentiation was induced by the large numbers of activated CD8(+) T cells and not the tumor environment. Provision of tumor-specific CD4(+) helper cells provided the signals required to promote both the development of CTL effector functions and increased clonal expansion, resulting in tumor eradication. Considering that only small numbers of tumor-specific CD8(+) T cells would be present in a conventional T cell repertoire, these data suggest that tumor growth alone may not provide the inflammatory signals necessary to support the development of CD8(+) T cell effector functions.  相似文献   

2.
Regulation of the CTL response by macrophage migration inhibitory factor   总被引:16,自引:0,他引:16  
Macrophage migration inhibitory factor (MIF) has been shown to be a pivotal cytokine that mediates host inflammatory and immune responses. Recently, immunoneutralization of MIF has been found to inhibit tumor growth in mice; however, the contributing mechanisms underlying this effect have not been well defined. We investigated whether MIF plays a regulatory role in the expression of CTL activity. In a mouse model of the CTL response using the OVA-transfected tumor cell line EL4 (EG.7), we found that cultures of splenocytes obtained from EG.7-primed mice secrete high levels of MIF following Ag stimulation in vitro. Notably, parallel splenocyte cultures treated with neutralizing anti-MIF mAb showed a significant increase in the CTL response directed against EG.7 cells compared with control mAb-treated cultures. This effect was accompanied by elevated expression of IFN-gamma. Histological examination of the EG. 7 tumors from anti-MIF-treated animals showed a prominent increase in both CD4(+) and CD8(+) T cells as well as apoptotic tumor cells, consistent with the observed augmentation of CTL activity in vivo by anti-MIF. This increased CTL activity was associated with enhanced expression of the common gamma(c)-chain of the IL-2R that mediates CD8(+) T cell survival. Finally, CD8(+) T lymphocytes obtained from the spleens of anti-MIF-treated EG.7 tumor-bearing mice, when transferred into recipient tumor-bearing mice, showed increased accumulation in the tumor tissue. These data provide the first evidence of an important role for MIF in the regulation and trafficking of anti-tumor T lymphocytes in vivo.  相似文献   

3.
Adoptive T cell tumor immunotherapy potentially consists of two protective components by the transferred effector cells, the immediate immune response and the subsequent development of memory T cells. The extent by which adoptively transferred CD8(+) CTL are destined to become memory T cells is ambiguous as most studies focus on the acute effects on tumor shortly following adoptive transfer. In this study we show that a substantial fraction of the input CTL develop into memory cells that reject a s.c. tumor challenge. The use of exogenous IL-2 or a combination of IL-2 and IL-4, but not solely IL-4, during the ex vivo culture for the CTL inoculation was necessary for efficient development of CD8(+) memory T cells. Thus, an important component of adoptive immunotherapy using CTL is the production of CD8(+) Ag-specific memory cells which is primarily favored by IL-2 receptor signaling during ex vivo generation of the effector CTL.  相似文献   

4.
The requirement for CD4(+) Th cells in the cross-priming of antitumor CTL is well accepted in tumor immunology. Here we report that the requirement for T cell help can be replaced by local production of GM-CSF at the vaccine site. Experiments using mice in which CD4(+) T cells were eliminated, either by Ab depletion or by gene knockout of the MHC class II beta-chain (MHC II KO), revealed that priming of therapeutic CD8(+) effector T cells following vaccination with a GM-CSF-transduced B16BL6-D5 tumor cell line occurred independently of CD4(+) T cell help. The adoptive transfer of CD8(+) effector T cells, but not CD4(+) effector T cells, led to complete regression of pulmonary metastases. Regression of pulmonary metastases did not require either host T cells or NK cells. Transfer of CD8(+) effector T cells alone could cure wild-type animals of systemic tumor; the majority of tumor-bearing mice survived long term after treatment (>100 days). In contrast, adoptive transfer of CD8(+) T cells to tumor-bearing MHC II KO mice improved survival, but eventually all MHC II KO mice succumbed to metastatic disease. WT mice cured by adoptive transfer of CD8(+) T cells were resistant to tumor challenge. Resistance was mediated by CD8(+) T cells in mice at 50 days, while both CD4(+) and CD8(+) T cells were important for protection in mice challenged 150 days following adoptive transfer. Thus, in this tumor model CD4(+) Th cells are not required for the priming phase of CD8(+) effector T cells; however, they are critical for both the complete elimination of tumor and the maintenance of a long term protective antitumor memory response in vivo.  相似文献   

5.
Therapeutic use of IL-2 can generate antitumor immunity; however, a variety of different mechanisms have been reported. We injected IL-2 intratumorally (i.t.) at different stages of growth, using our unique murine model of mesothelioma (AE17; and AE17 transfected with secretory OVA (AE17-sOVA)), and systematically analyzed real-time events as they occurred in vivo. The majority of mice with small tumors when treatment commenced displayed complete tumor regression, remained tumor free for >2 mo, and survived rechallenge with AE17 tumor cells. However, mice with large tumors at the start of treatment failed to respond. Timing experiments showed that IL-2-mediated responses were dependent upon tumor size, not on the duration of disease. Although i.t. IL-2 did not alter tumor Ag presentation in draining lymph nodes, it did enhance a previously primed, endogenous, tumor-specific in vivo CTL response that coincided with regressing tumors. Both CD4(+) and CD8(+) cells were required for IL-2-mediated tumor eradication, because IL-2 therapy failed in CD4(+)-depleted, CD8(+)-depleted, and both CD4(+)- and CD8(+)-depleted C57BL/6J animals. Tumor-infiltrating CD8(+) T cells, but not CD4(+) T cells, increased in association with a marked reduction in tumor-associated vascularity. Destruction of blood vessels required CD8(+) T cells, because this did not occur in nude mice or in CD8(+)-depleted C57BL/6J mice. These results show that repeated doses of i.t. (but not systemic) IL-2 mediates tumor regression via an enhanced endogenous tumor-specific CTL response concomitant with reduced vasculature, thereby demonstrating a novel mechanism for IL-2 activity.  相似文献   

6.
We have previously shown that CD4(+) T cells are required to optimally expand viral-specific memory CD8(+) CTL responses using a human dendritic cell-T cell-based coculture system. OX40 (CD134), a 50-kDa transmembrane protein of the TNFR family, is expressed primarily on activated CD4(+) T cells. In murine models, the OX40/OX40L pathway has been shown to play a critical costimulatory role in dendritic cell/T cell interactions that may be important in promoting long-lived CD4(+) T cells, which subsequently can help CD8(+) T cell responses. The current study examined whether OX40 ligation on ex vivo CD4(+) T cells can enhance their ability to "help" virus-specific CTL responses in HIV-1-infected and -uninfected individuals. OX40 ligation of CD4(+) T cells by human OX40L-IgG1 enhanced the ex vivo expansion of HIV-1-specific and EBV-specific CTL from HIV-1-infected and -uninfected individuals, respectively. The mechanism whereby OX40 ligation enhanced help of CTL was independent of the induction of cytokines such as IL-2 or any inhibitory effect on CD4(+) T regulatory cells, but was associated with a direct effect on proliferation of CD4(+) T cells. Thus, OX40 ligation on CD4(+) T cells represents a potentially novel immunotherapeutic strategy that should be investigated to treat and prevent persistent virus infections, such as HIV-1 infection.  相似文献   

7.
The origins of "help" in rejection of syngeneic tumors by the CD8 T cell lineage was examined with a model tumor inappropriately expressing novel class I MHC and subject to cytolytic T cell (CTL)-mediated rejection. The requirement for CD4+ Th cells to induce CD8+ CTL effectors in vivo was investigated by using C3H mice selectively depleted of either CD4+ or CD8+ T cells. Rejection of the tumor was vigorous and indistinguishable from normal mice after depletion of CD4+ T cells in vivo. In contrast, in CD8+ T cell-depleted mice tumors grew progressively, confirming that T cells of the CD8+ lineage are required for a tumoricidal immune response, and cells of this lineage are sufficient for a primary response. Taken together, these results demonstrate that, in the absence of CD4+ T cells in vivo, unprimed cells of the CD8+ lineage are fully competent to mount an effective CTL immune response to syngeneic cells expressing novel class I Ag, consistent with the concept that only T cells with class I recognition specificity may be required to satisfy the need for both help and effector functions in the response.  相似文献   

8.
By using adoptive transfer of Ag-loaded bone marrow-derived dendritic cells (BMDC), we have established an in vivo model of CTL priming. Activation of CTL in these experiments required both CD4(+) T cells and CD154, demonstrating that this model reflects CD4(+) T cell-dependent dendritic cell (DC) licensing. Because IL-12 has been suggested to play an important role in CTL activation by DC, we examined the ability of BMDC to prime CTL in the complete absence of IL-12 using p40-deficient mice. We observed that the absence of IL-12 does not affect the phenotype or allostimulatory function of BMDC after in vitro maturation. Moreover, there was no difference in the ability of Ag-loaded DC to elicit CTL cytotoxicity, whether the Ag was delivered by virus infection or peptide pulsing. Equal frequencies of Ag-specific, IFN-gamma-secreting CD8(+) T cells developed in both wild-type and IL-12-deficient backgrounds. Finally, CTL generated in the IL-12-deficient environment were capable of protecting immunized mice against tumor challenge, demonstrating that these CTL were fully functional, despite the absence of IL-12 during the maturation process in vivo. These results indicate that IL-12 is not critical for the development of IFN-gamma secreting, CD8(+) T cells and that another mechanism must be used by licensed DC to prime and activate CTL.  相似文献   

9.
CD4(+) T cells have been shown to play a critical role in the maintenance of an effective anti-viral CD8(+) CTL response in murine models. Recent studies have demonstrated that CD4(+) T cells provide help to CTLs through ligation of the CD40 receptor on dendritic cells. The role of CD4(+) T cell help in the expansion of virus-specific CD8(+) memory T cell responses was examined in normal volunteers recently vaccinated to influenza and in HIV-1 infected individuals. In recently vaccinated normal volunteers, CD4(+) T cell help was required for optimal in vitro expansion of influenza-specific CTL responses. Also, CD40 ligand trimer (CD40LT) enhanced CTL responses and was able to completely substitute for CD4(+) T cell help in PBMCs from normal volunteers. In HIV-1 infection, CD4(+) T cell help was required for optimal expansion of HIV-1-specific memory CTL in vitro in 9 of 10 patients. CD40LT could enhance CTL in the absence of CD4(+) T cell help in the majority of patients; however, the degree of enhancement of CTL responses was variable such that, in some patients, CD40LT could not completely substitute for CD4(+) T cell help. In those HIV-1-infected patients who demonstrated poor responses to CD40LT, a dysfunction in circulating CD8(+) memory T cells was demonstrated, which was reversed by the addition of cytokines including IL-2. Finally, it was demonstrated that IL-15 produced by CD40LT-stimulated dendritic cells may be an additional mechanism by which CD40LT induces the expansion of memory CTL in CD4(+) T cell-depleted conditions, where IL-2 is lacking.  相似文献   

10.
In the present report, we have investigated TRAIL/APO2 ligand (APO2L) expression, regulation, and function in human lung carcinoma tumor-infiltrating lymphocytes. Using a panel of non-small cell lung carcinoma cell lines, we first showed that most of them expressed TRAIL-R1/DR4, TRAIL-R2/DR5, but not TRAIL-R3/DcR1 and TRAIL-R4/DcR2, and were susceptible to APO2L/TRAIL-induced cell death. Two APO2L/TRAIL-sensitive tumor cell lines (MHC class I(+)/II(+) or I(+)/II(-)) were selected and specific CD4(+) HLA-DR- or CD8(+) HLA-A2-restricted CTL clones were respectively isolated from autologous tumor-infiltrating lymphocytes. Interestingly, although the established T cell clones did not constitutively express detectable levels of APO2L/TRAIL, engagement of their TCR via activation with specific tumor cells selectively induced profound APO2L/TRAIL expression on the CD4(+), but not on the CD8(+), CTL clones. Furthermore, as opposed to the CD8(+) CTL clone which mainly used granule exocytosis pathway, the CD4(+) CTL clone lysed the specific target via both perforin/granzymes and APO2L/TRAIL-mediated mechanisms. The latter cytotoxicity correlated with APO2L/TRAIL expression and was significantly enhanced in the presence of IFN-alpha. More interestingly, in vivo studies performed in SCID/nonobese diabetic mice transplanted with autologous tumor and transferred with the specific CD4(+) CTL clone in combination with IFN-alpha resulted in an important APO2L/TRAIL-mediated tumor growth inhibition, which was prohibited by soluble TRAIL-R2. Our findings suggest that APO2L/TRAIL, specifically induced by autologous tumor and up-regulated by IFN-alpha, may be a key mediator of tumor-specific CD4(+) CTL-mediated cell death and point to a potent role of this T cell subset in tumor growth control.  相似文献   

11.
Adoptive T cell therapy has been successfully used for treatment of viral and malignant diseases. However, little is known about the fate and trafficking of transferred Ag-specific T cells. Using the tetramer (TM) technology which allows for detection and quantification of Ag-specific CTL, we assessed the frequency of circulating Melan-A-specific CTL in advanced melanoma patients during adoptive T cell therapy. Melan-A-specific CTL were generated from HLA-A2.1(+) patients by in vitro stimulation of CD8(+) T cells with dendritic cells pulsed with a mutated HLA-A2-binding Melan-A (ELAGIGILTV) peptide. Eight patients received three infusions of 0.25-11 x 10(8) Melan-A-specific CTL i.v. at 2-wk intervals along with low-dose IL-2. The transferred T cell product contained a mean of 42.1% Melan-A-TM(+) CTL. Before therapy, the frequencies of Melan-A-specific CTL in patients' circulating CD8(+) T cells ranged from 0.01 to 0.07%. Characterization of the TM frequencies before and at different time points after transfer revealed an increase of circulating Melan-A-specific CTL up to 2%, correlating well with the number of transferred CTL. An elevated frequency of TM(+) T cells was demonstrated up to 14 days after transfer, suggesting long-term survival and/or proliferation of transferred CTL. Combining TM analysis with a flow cytometry-based cytokine secretion assay, unimpaired production of IFN-gamma was demonstrated in vivo for at least 24 h after transfer. Indium-111 labeling of Melan-A-specific CTL demonstrated localization of transferred CTL to metastatic sites as early as 48 h after injection. Overall, the results suggest that in vitro-generated Melan-A-specific CTL survive intact in vivo for several weeks and localize preferentially to tumor.  相似文献   

12.
Protective immunity of BALB/c mice immunized with simian virus 40 (SV40) large T antigen (TAg) against SV40-transformed, TAg-expressing mKSA tumor cells is critically dependent on both CD8(+) and CD4(+) T lymphocytes. By depleting mice of T-cell subsets at different times before and after tumor challenge, we found that at all times, CD4(+) and CD8(+) cells both were equally important in establishing and maintaining a protective immune response. CD4(+) cells do not contribute to tumor eradication by directly lysing mKSA cells. However, CD4(+) lymphocytes provide help to CD8(+) cells to proliferate and to mature into fully active cytotoxic T lymphocytes (CTL). Depletion of CD4(+) cells by a single injection of CD4-specific monoclonal antibody at any time from directly before injection of the vaccinating antigen to up to 7 days after tumor challenge inhibited the generation of cytolytic CD8(+) lymphocytes. T helper cells in this system secrete the typical Th-1 cytokines interleukin 2 (IL-2) and gamma interferon. Because in this system TAg-specific CD8(+) cells secrete only minute amounts of IL-2, it appears that T helper cells provide these cytokines for CD8(+) T cells. Moreover, this helper effect of CD4(+) T cells in mKSA tumor rejection in BALB/c mice does not simply improve the activity of TAg-specific CD8(+) CTL but actually enables them to mature into cytolytic effector cells. Beyond this activity, the presence of T helper cells is necessary even in the late phase of tumor cell rejection in order to maintain protective immunity. However, despite the support of CD4(+) T helper cells, the tumor-specific CTL response is so weak that only at the site of tumor cell inoculation and not in the spleen or in the regional lymph nodes can TAg-specific CTL be detected.  相似文献   

13.
DNA vaccines can activate immunity against tumor Ags expressed as MHC class I-associated peptides. However, priming of CD8(+) CTL against weak tumor Ags may require adjuvant molecules. We have used a pathogen-derived sequence from tetanus toxin (fragment C (FrC)) fused to tumor Ag sequences to promote Ab and CD4(+) T cell responses. For induction of CD8(+) T cell responses, the FrC sequence has been engineered to remove potentially competitive MHC class I-binding epitopes and to improve presentation of tumor epitopes. The colon carcinoma CT26 expresses an endogenous retroviral gene product, gp70, containing a known H2-L(d)-restricted epitope (AH1). A DNA vaccine encoding gp70 alone was a poor inducer of CTL, and performance was not significantly improved by fusion of full-length FrC. However, use of a minimized domain of FrC, with the AH1 sequence fused to the 3' position, led to rapid induction of high levels of CTL. IFN-gamma-producing epitope-specific CTL were detectable ex vivo and these killed CT26 targets in vitro. The single epitope vaccine was more effective than GM-CSF-transfected CT26 tumor cells in inducing an AH1-specific CTL response and equally effective in providing protection against tumor challenge. Levels of AH1-specific CTL in vivo were increased following injection of tumor cells, and CTL expanded in vitro were able to kill CT26 cells in tumor bearers. Pre-existing immunity to tetanus toxoid had no effect on the induction of AH1-specific CTL. These data demonstrate the power of epitope-specific CTL against tumor cells and illustrate a strategy for priming immunity via a dual component DNA vaccine.  相似文献   

14.
Mutations in ras proto-oncogenes are commonly found in a diversity of malignancies and may encode unique, non-self epitopes for T cell-mediated antitumor activity. In a BALB/c (H-2(d)) murine model, we have identified a single peptide sequence derived from the ras oncogenes that contained both CD8(+) and CD4(+) T cell epitopes in a nested configuration. This peptide reflected ras sequence 4-16, and contained the substitution of Gly to Val at position 12 ?i.e., 4-16(Val12)?. Mice immunized with this 13-mer peptide induced a strong antigen (Ag)-specific CD4(+) proliferative response in vitro. In contrast, mice inoculated with the wild-type ras sequence failed to generate a peptide-specific T cell response. Additionally, mice immunized with the ras 4-16(Val12) peptide concomitantly displayed an Ag-specific CD8(+) cytotoxic T lymphocyte (CTL) response, as determined by lysis of syngeneic tumor target cells incubated with the nominal 9-mer nested epitope peptide ?i.e., 4-12(Val12)?, as well as lysis of tumor target cells expressing the corresponding ras codon 12 mutation. Analysis of the Valpha- and Vbeta-chains of the T cell receptor (TCR) expressed by these CTL revealed usage of the Valpha1 and Vbeta9 subunits, consistent with the TCR phenotype of anti-ras Val12 CTL lines produced by in vivo immunization with the nominal peptide epitope alone. Moreover, immunization with the nested epitope peptide, as compared to immunization with either the 9-mer CTL peptide alone or an admixture of the 9-mer CTL peptide with an overlapping 13-mer CD4(+) T cell helper peptide ?i.e., 5-17(Val12)? lacking the class I N-terminus anchor site, enhanced the production of the CD8(+) T cell response. Finally, immunization with plasmid DNA encoding the ras 4-16(Val12) sequence led to the induction of both Ag-specific proliferative and cytotoxic responses. Overall, these results suggested that a single peptide immunogen containing nested mutant ras-specific CD4(+) and CD8(+) T cell epitopes: (1) can be processed in vivo to induce both subset-specific T lymphocyte responses; and (2) leads to the generation of a quantitatively enhanced CD8(+) CTL response, likely due to the intimate coexistence of CD4(+) help, which may have implications in peptide- or DNA-based immunotherapies.  相似文献   

15.
CD8(+) T cells play an essential role in immunity to Chlamydia pneumoniae (Cpn). However, the target Ags recognized by Cpn-specific CD8(+) T cells have not been identified, and the mechanisms by which this T cell subset contributes to protection remain unknown. In this work we demonstrate that Cpn infection primes a pathogen-specific CD8(+) T cell response in mice. Eighteen H-2(b) binding peptides representing sequences from 12 Cpn Ags sensitized target cells for MHC class I-restricted lysis by CD8(+) CTL generated from the spleens and lungs of infected mice. Peptide-specific IFN-gamma-secreting CD8(+) T cells were present in local and systemic compartments after primary infection, and these cells expanded after pathogen re-exposure. CD8(+) T cell lines to the 18 Cpn epitope-bearing peptides were cytotoxic, displayed a memory phenotype, and secreted IFN-gamma and TNF-alpha, but not IL-4. These CTL lines lysed Cpn-infected macrophages, and the lytic activity was inhibited by brefeldin A, indicating endogenous processing of CTL Ags. Finally, Cpn peptide-specific CD8(+) CTL suppressed chlamydial growth in vitro by direct lysis of infected cells and by secretion of IFN-gamma and other soluble factors. These studies provide information on the mechanisms by which CD8(+) CTL protect against Cpn, furnish the tools to investigate their possible role in immunopathology, and lay the foundation for future work to develop vaccines against acute and chronic Cpn infections.  相似文献   

16.
In the DBA/2 --> unirradiated (C57BL/6 x DBA/2)F(1) model of chronic graft-vs-host disease (cGVHD), donor CD4(+) T cells play a critical role in breaking host B cell tolerance, while donor CD8(+) T cells are rapidly removed and the remaining cells fall into anergy. Previously we have demonstrated that in vivo ligation of GITR (glucocorticoid-induced TNF receptor-related gene) can activate donor CD8(+) T cells, subsequently converting the disease pattern from cGVHD to an acute form. In this study, we investigated the effect of an agonistic mAb against CD40 on cGVHD. Treatment of anti-CD40 mAb inhibited the production of anti-DNA IgG1 autoantibody and the development of glomerulonephritis. The inhibition of cGVHD occurred because anti-CD40 mAb prevented donor CD8(+) T cell anergy such that subsequently activated donor CD8(+) T cells deleted host CD4(+) T cells and host B cells involved in autoantibody production. Additionally, functionally activated donor CD8(+) T cells induced full engraftment of donor hematopoietic cells and exhibited an increased graft-vs-leukemia effect. However, induction of acute GVHD by donor CD8(+) T cells seemed to be not so apparent. Further CTL analysis indicated that there were lower levels of donor CTL activity against host cells in mice that received anti-CD40 mAb, compared with mice that received anti-GITR mAb. Taken together, our results suggest that a different intensity of donor CTL activity is required for removal of host hematopoietic cells, including leukemia vs induction of acute GVHD.  相似文献   

17.
Dendritic cells (DC) are potent APCs for naive T cells in vivo. This is evident by inducing T cell responses through adoptive DC transfer. Priming specific CTL responses in vivo often requires "help". We study alternative sources of help in DC-dependent priming of MHC class I-restricted CTL. Priming an anti-viral CTL response in naive B6 mice by adoptive transfer of antigenic peptide-pulsed DC required CD4(+) T cell help. CTL priming was facilitated by providing MHC class II-dependent specific help. Furthermore, transfers of MHC class II-deficient pulsed DC into naive, normal hosts, or DC transfers into naive, CD4(+) T cell-depleted hosts primed CTL inefficiently. Pretreatment of DC with immune-stimulating oligodeoxynucleotides rendered them more efficient for CD4(+) T cell-independent priming of CTL. DC copresenting a K(b)-binding antigenic peptide and the CD1d-binding glycolipid alpha-galactosyl-ceramide efficiently primed CTL in a class II-independent way. To obtain NKT cell-dependent help in CTL priming, the same DC had to present both the peptide and the glycolipid. CTL priming by adoptive DC transfer was largely NK cell-dependent. The requirement for NK cells was only partially overcome by recruiting NKT cell help into DC-dependent CTL priming. NKT cells thus are potent helper cells for DC-dependent CTL priming.  相似文献   

18.
IL-21 is an immune-stimulatory four alpha helix cytokine produced by activated T cells. To study the in vivo antitumor activities of IL-21, TS/A murine mammary adenocarcinoma cells were genetically modified to secrete IL-21 (TS/A-IL-21). These cells developed small tumors that were subsequently rejected by 90% of s.c. injected syngeneic mice. Five days after injection, TS/A-IL-21 tumors showed numerous infiltrating granulocytes, NK cells, and to a lesser extent CD8(+) T cells, along with the expression of TNF-alpha, IFN-gamma, and endothelial adhesion molecules ICAM-1 and VCAM-1. At day 7, CD8(+) and CD4(+) T cells increased together with IFN-gamma, and the CXC chemokines IFN-gamma-inducible protein 10, monokine induced by IFN-gamma, and IFN-inducible T cell alpha-chemoattractant. The TS/A-IL-21 tumor displayed a disrupted vascular network with abortive sprouting and signs of endothelial cell damage. In vivo depletion experiments by specific Abs showed that rejection of TS/A-IL-21 cells required CD8(+) T lymphocytes and granulocytes. When injected in IFN-gamma-deficient mice, TS/A-IL-21 cells formed tumors that regressed in only 29% of animals, indicating a role for IFN-gamma in IL-21-mediated antitumor response, but also the existence of IFN-gamma-independent effects. Most immunocompetent mice rejecting TS/A-IL-21 cells developed protective immunity against TS/A-pc (75%) and against the antigenically related C26 colon carcinoma cells (61%), as indicated by rechallenge experiments. A specific CTL response against the gp70-env protein of an endogenous murine retrovirus coexpressed by TS/A and C26 cells was detected in mice rejecting TS/A-IL-21 cells. These data suggest that IL-21 represents a suitable adjuvant in inducing specific CTL responses.  相似文献   

19.
Protracted psychological stress elevates circulating glucocorticoids, which can suppress CD8(+) T cell-mediated immunity, but the mechanisms are incompletely understood. Dendritic cells (DCs), required for initiating CTL responses, are vulnerable to stress/corticosterone, which can contribute to diminished CTL responses. Cross-priming of CD8(+) T cells by DCs is required for initiating CTL responses against many intracellular pathogens that do not infect DCs. We examined the effects of stress/corticosterone on MHC class I (MHC I) cross-presentation and priming and show that stress/corticosterone-exposed DCs have a reduced ability to cross-present OVA and activate MHC I-OVA(257-264)-specific T cells. Using a murine model of psychological stress and OVA-loaded β(2)-microglobulin knockout "donor" cells that cannot present Ag, DCs from stressed mice induced markedly less Ag-specific CTL proliferation in a glucocorticoid receptor-dependent manner, and endogenous in vivo T cell cytolytic activity generated by cross-presented Ag was greatly diminished. These deficits in cross-presentation/priming were not due to altered Ag donation, Ag uptake (phagocytosis, receptor-mediated endocytosis, or fluid-phase uptake), or costimulatory molecule expression by DCs. However, proteasome activity in corticosterone-treated DCs or splenic DCs from stressed mice was partially suppressed, which limits formation of antigenic peptide-MHC I complexes. In addition, the lymphoid tissue-resident CD11b(-)CD24(+)CD8α(+) DC subset, which carries out cross-presentation/priming, was preferentially depleted in stressed mice. At the same time, CD11b(-)CD24(+)CD8α(-) DC precursors were increased, suggesting a block in development of CD8α(+) DCs. Therefore, glucocorticoid-induced changes in both the cellular composition of the immune system and intracellular protein degradation contribute to impaired CTL priming in stressed mice.  相似文献   

20.
Although increasing evidence suggests that CTL are important to fight the development of some cancers, the frequency of detectable tumor-specific T cells is low in cancer patients, and these cells have generally poor functional capacities, compared with virus-specific CD8(+) T cells. The generation with a vaccine of potent CTL responses against tumor Ags therefore remains a major challenge. In the present study, ex vivo analyses of Melan-A-specific CD8(+) T cells following vaccination with Melan-A peptide and CpG oligodeoxynucleotides revealed the successful induction in the circulation of effective melanoma-specific T cells, i.e., with phenotypic and functional characteristics similar to those of CTL specific for immunodominant viral Ags. Nonetheless, the eventual impact on tumor development in vaccinated melanoma donors remained limited. The comprehensive study of vaccinated patient metastasis shows that vaccine-driven tumor-infiltrating lymphocytes, although activated, still differed in functional capacities compared with blood counterparts. This coincided with a significant increase of FoxP3(+) regulatory T cell activity within the tumor. The consistent induction of effective tumor-specific CD8(+) T cells in the circulation with a vaccine represents a major achievement; however, clinical benefit may not be achieved unless the tumor environment can be altered to enable CD8(+) T cell efficacy.  相似文献   

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