| Literature DB >> 17992258 |
Thomas Calzascia1, Marc Pellegrini, Håkan Hall, Laurent Sabbagh, Nobuyuki Ono, Alisha R Elford, Tak W Mak, Pamela S Ohashi.
Abstract
TNF-alpha antagonists are widely used in the treatment of inflammatory and autoimmune diseases, but their use is associated with reactivation of latent infections. This highlights the importance of TNF-alpha in immunity to certain pathogens and raises concerns that critical aspects of immune function are impaired in its absence. Unfortunately, the role of TNF-alpha in the regulation of T cell responses is clouded by a myriad of contradictory reports. Here, we show a role for TNF-alpha and its receptors, TNFR1 and TNFR2, specifically in antitumor immunity. TNF-alpha-deficient mice exhibited normal antiviral responses associated with strong inflammation. However, TNF-alpha/TNFR1-mediated signals on APCs and TNF-alpha/TNFR2 signals on T cells were critically required for effective priming, proliferation, and recruitment of tumor-specific T cells. Furthermore, in the absence of TNF-alpha signaling, tumor immune surveillance was severely abrogated. Finally, treatment with a CD40 agonist alone or in combination with TLR2 stimuli was able to rescue proliferation of TNF-alpha-deficient T cells. Therefore, TNF-alpha signaling may be required only for immune responses in conditions of limited immunostimulatory capacity, such as tumor surveillance. Importantly, these results suggest that prolonged continuous TNF-alpha blockade in patients may have long-term complications, including potential tumor development or progression.Entities:
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Year: 2007 PMID: 17992258 PMCID: PMC2066188 DOI: 10.1172/JCI32567
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Clin Invest ISSN: 0021-9738 Impact factor: 14.808