Interleukin-12 increases bispecific-antibody-mediated natural killer cell cytotoxicity against human tumors |
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Authors: | Ugur Sahin Sylvia Kraft-Bauer Sascha Ohnesorge M. Pfreundschuh Christoph Renner |
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Affiliation: | (1) Med. Klinik I, University of Saarland Medical School, Oscar-Orth-Str., D-66421 Homburg/Saar, Germany, DE |
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Abstract: | The combination of CD16/CD30 bispecific monoclonal antibodies (bi-mAb) and unstimulated human resting natural killer (NK) cells can cure about 50% of mice with severe combined immunodeficiency (SCID) bearing subcutaneously growing established Hodgkin’s lymphoma. As interleukin-2 (IL-2) and IL-12 have been shown to increase NK cell activity, we tested the capacity of these cytokines to increase bi-mAb-mediated NK cell cytotoxicity against two types of human tumors (Hodgkin’s disease and colorectal carcinoma). Unstimulated NK cells needed a three- to five-times higher antibody concentration than cytokine-stimulated NK cells to exert similar levels of bi-mAb-mediated cytotoxicity. The augmented tumor cell lysis was achieved with IL-12 at considerably lower concentrations than with IL-2 and was associated with a significantly increased bi-mAb-mediated intracellular Ca2+ mobilization. The efficiency of IL-12 in this setting together with its low toxicity make it the ideal candidate for a combination therapy with NK-cell-activating bi-mAb in human tumors that are resistant to standard treatment. Received: 26 July 1995 / Accepted: 16 November 1995 |
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Keywords: | Bispecific antibodies Colorectal carcinoma Hodgkin’ s Disease IL-12 |
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