| Literature DB >> 11283672 |
M Feuerer1, P Beckhove, L Bai, E F Solomayer, G Bastert, I J Diel, C Pedain, M Oberniedermayr, V Schirrmacher, V Umansky.
Abstract
In an analysis of 84 primary-operated breast cancer patients and 11 healthy donors, we found that the bone marrow of most patients contained memory T cells with specificity for tumor-associated antigens. Patients' bone marrow and peripheral blood contained CD8+ T cells that specifically bound HLA/peptide tetramers. In short-term culture with autologous dendritic cells pre-pulsed with tumor lysates, patients' memory T cells from bone marrow (but not peripheral blood) could be specifically reactivated to interferon-gamma-producing and cytotoxic effector cells. A single transfer of restimulated bone-marrow T cells into NOD/SCID mice caused regression of autologous tumor xenotransplants associated with infiltration by human T cells and tumor-cell apoptosis and necrosis. T cells from peripheral blood showed much lower anti-tumor reactivity. Our findings reveal an innate, specific recognition of breast cancer antigens and point to a possible novel cancer therapy using patients' bone-marrow-derived memory T cells.Entities:
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Year: 2001 PMID: 11283672 DOI: 10.1038/86523
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Nat Med ISSN: 1078-8956 Impact factor: 53.440