| Literature DB >> 14512316 |
Mie Nieda1, Miki Okai, Andrea Tazbirkova, Henry Lin, Ayako Yamaura, Kazuki Ide, Rick Abraham, Takeo Juji, David J Macfarlane, Andrew J Nicol.
Abstract
Human Valpha24+Vbeta11+ natural killer T (NKT) cells are a distinct CD1d-restricted lymphoid subset specifically and potently activated by alpha-galactosylceramide (alpha-GalCer) (KRN7000) presented by CD1d on antigen-presenting cells. Preclinical models show that activation of Valpha24+Vbeta11+ NKT cells induces effective antitumor immune responses and potentially important secondary immune effects, including activation of conventional T cells and NK cells. We describe the first clinical trial of cancer immune therapy with alpha-GalCer-pulsed CD1d-expressing dendritic cells. The results show that this therapy has substantial, rapid, and highly reproducible specific effects on Valpha24+Vbeta11+ NKT cells and provide the first human in vivo evidence that Valpha24+Vbeta11+ NKT cell stimulation leads to activation of both innate and acquired immunity, resulting in modulation of NK, T-, and B-cell numbers and increased serum interferon-gamma. We present the first clinical evidence that Valpha24+Vbeta11+ NKT cell memory produces faster, more vigorous secondary immune responses by innate and acquired immunity upon restimulation.Entities:
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Year: 2003 PMID: 14512316 DOI: 10.1182/blood-2003-04-1155
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Blood ISSN: 0006-4971 Impact factor: 22.113