Literature DB >> 11120842

T cell-mediated tumor rejection displays diverse dependence upon perforin and IFN-gamma mechanisms that cannot be predicted from in vitro T cell characteristics.

L Peng1, J C Krauss, G E Plautz, S Mukai, S Shu, P A Cohen.   

Abstract

Experimental pulmonary metastases have been successfully treated by adoptive transfer of tumor-sensitized T cells from perforin knockout (KO) or Fas/APO-1 ligand(KO) mice, suggesting a prominent role for secretion of cytokines such as IFN-gamma. In the present study we confirmed that rejection of established methylcholanthrene-205 (MCA-205) pulmonary metastases displayed a requirement for T cell IFN-gamma expression. However, this requirement could be obviated by transferring larger numbers of tumor-sensitized IFN-gamma (KO) T cells or by immunosensitizing sublethal irradiation (500 rad) of the host before adoptive therapy. Extrapulmonary tumors (MCA-205 s.c. and intracranial) that required adjunct sublethal irradiation for treatment efficacy also displayed no requirement for host or T cell expression of IFN-gamma. Nonetheless, rejection of MCA-205 s.c. tumors and i.p. EL-4 tumors, but not MCA-205 pulmonary or intracranial tumors, displayed a significant requirement for T cell perforin expression (i.e., CTL participation). The capacity of T cells to lyse tumor targets and secrete IFN-gamma in vitro before adoptive transfer was nonpredictive of the roles of these activities in subsequent tumor rejection. Adoptive therapy studies employing KO mice are therefore indispensable for revealing a diversity of tumor rejection mechanisms that may lack in vitro correlation due to delays in their induction. Seemingly contradictory KO data from different studies are reconciled by the capacity of anti-tumor T cells to rely on alternative mechanisms when treated in larger numbers, the variable participation of CTL at different anatomic locations of tumor, and the apparent capacity of sublethal irradiation to provide a therapeutic alternative to host or T cell IFN-gamma production.

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Year:  2000        PMID: 11120842     DOI: 10.4049/jimmunol.165.12.7116

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Immunol        ISSN: 0022-1767            Impact factor:   5.422


  8 in total

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Authors:  Maria de la Luz Garcia-Hernandez; Hiromasa Hamada; Joyce B Reome; Sara K Misra; Michael P Tighe; Richard W Dutton
Journal:  J Immunol       Date:  2010-03-17       Impact factor: 5.422

2.  Cellular and molecular requirements for rejection of B16 melanoma in the setting of regulatory T cell depletion and homeostatic proliferation.

Authors:  Justin Kline; Long Zhang; Lauren Battaglia; Kenneth S Cohen; Thomas F Gajewski
Journal:  J Immunol       Date:  2012-02-06       Impact factor: 5.422

3.  Two-photon imaging of intratumoral CD8+ T cell cytotoxic activity during adoptive T cell therapy in mice.

Authors:  Béatrice Breart; Fabrice Lemaître; Susanna Celli; Philippe Bousso
Journal:  J Clin Invest       Date:  2008-04       Impact factor: 14.808

4.  Antigen presented by tumors in vivo determines the nature of CD8+ T-cell cytotoxicity.

Authors:  Anil Shanker; Alan D Brooks; Kristen M Jacobsen; John W Wine; Robert H Wiltrout; Hideo Yagita; Thomas J Sayers
Journal:  Cancer Res       Date:  2009-08-04       Impact factor: 12.701

5.  IFN-gamma- and TNF-dependent bystander eradication of antigen-loss variants in established mouse cancers.

Authors:  Bin Zhang; Theodore Karrison; Donald A Rowley; Hans Schreiber
Journal:  J Clin Invest       Date:  2008-04       Impact factor: 14.808

6.  Adoptive immunotherapy with Cl-IB-MECA-treated CD8+ T cells reduces melanoma growth in mice.

Authors:  Antonella Montinaro; Giovanni Forte; Rosalinda Sorrentino; Antonio Luciano; Giuseppe Palma; Claudio Arra; Ian M Adcock; Aldo Pinto; Silvana Morello
Journal:  PLoS One       Date:  2012-09-24       Impact factor: 3.240

7.  Tumor-specific T cells signal tumor destruction via the lymphotoxin beta receptor.

Authors:  Hauke Winter; Natasja K van den Engel; Christian H Poehlein; Rudolf A Hatz; Bernard A Fox; Hong-Ming Hu
Journal:  J Transl Med       Date:  2007-03-13       Impact factor: 5.531

8.  Aberrant Glycosylation of Anchor-Optimized MUC1 Peptides Can Enhance Antigen Binding Affinity and Reverse Tolerance to Cytotoxic T Lymphocytes.

Authors:  Latha B Pathangey; Vani Lakshminarayanan; Vera J Suman; Barbara A Pockaj; Pinku Mukherjee; Sandra J Gendler
Journal:  Biomolecules       Date:  2016-06-29
  8 in total

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