Administration of a CD25-directed immunotoxin, LMB-2, to patients with metastatic melanoma induces a selective partial reduction in regulatory T cells in vivo |
| |
Authors: | Powell Daniel J Felipe-Silva Aloisio Merino Maria J Ahmadzadeh Mojgan Allen Tamika Levy Catherine White Donald E Mavroukakis Sharon Kreitman Robert J Rosenberg Steven A Pastan Ira |
| |
Affiliation: | Surgery Branch, National Cancer Institute, National Institutes of Health, Bethesda, MD 20892, USA. Daniel_Powell@nih.gov |
| |
Abstract: | CD25+ CD4+ T regulatory (Treg) cells regulate peripheral self tolerance and possess the ability to suppress antitumor responses, which may in part explain the poor clinical response of cancer patients undergoing active immunization protocols. We have previously shown that in vitro incubation of human PBMC with LMB-2, a CD25-directed immunotoxin, significantly reduced CD25+ FOXP3+ CD4+ Treg cells without impairing the function of the remaining lymphocytes. In the current study, eight patients with metastatic melanoma were treated with LMB-2 followed by MART-1 and gp100-specific peptide vaccination. LMB-2 administration resulted in a preferential, transient reduction in mean circulating CD25+ CD4+ T cell number, from 83 +/- 16 cells/microl to a nadir of 17 +/- 5 cells/microl, a 79.1% reduction. FOXP3 analysis revealed a less robust depletion with mean FOXP3+ CD4+ Treg cell number decreasing from 74 +/- 15 cells/microl to 36 +/- 8 cells/microl, a 51.4% reduction. FOXP3+ CD4+ Treg cells that survived LMB-2-mediated cytotoxicity expressed little or no CD25. Similar to the peripheral blood, immunohistochemical analysis showed a 68.9% mean reduction in FOXP3+ CD4+ Treg cell frequency in evaluable lesions. Despite inducing a reduction in Treg cell numbers in vivo, LMB-2 therapy did not augment the immune response to cancer vaccination and no patient experienced an objective response or autoimmunity. These data demonstrate the capacity of a CD25-directed immunotoxin to selectively mediate a transient partial reduction in circulating and tumor-infiltrating Treg cells in vivo, and suggest that more comprehensive Treg cell elimination may be required to bolster antitumor responses in patients with metastatic melanoma. |
| |
Keywords: | |
本文献已被 PubMed 等数据库收录! |
|