Literature DB >> 18369621

Therapeutic efficacy of antitumor dendritic cell vaccinations correlates with persistent Th1 responses, high intratumor CD8+ T cell recruitment and low relative regulatory T cell infiltration.

Gregory Driessens1, Laurence Gordower, Lise Nuttin, Patrick Stordeur, Didier Blocklet, Dominique Egrise, Thierry Velu, Catherine Bruyns.   

Abstract

Despite the increasing number of immunotherapeutic strategies for the treatment of cancer, most approaches have failed to correlate the induction of an anti-tumor immune response with therapeutic efficacy. We therefore took advantage of a successful vaccination strategy-combining dendritic cells and irradiated GM-CSF secreting tumor cells-to compare the immune response induced against 9L gliosarcoma tumors in cured rats versus those with progressively growing tumors. At the systemic level, the tumor specific cytotoxic responses were quite heterogeneous in uncured vaccinated rats, and were surprisingly often high in animals with rapidly-growing tumors. IFN-gamma secretion by activated splenic T cells was more discriminative as the CD4+ T cell-mediated production was weak in uncured rats whereas high in cured ones. At the tumor level, regressing tumors were strongly infiltrated by CD8+ T cells, which demonstrated lytic capacities as high as their splenic counterparts. In contrast, progressing tumors were weakly infiltrated by T cells showing impaired cytotoxic activities. Proportionately to the T cell infiltrate, the expression of Foxp3 was increased in progressive tumors suggesting inhibition by regulatory T cells. In conclusion, the main difference between cured and uncured vaccinated animals does not depend directly upon the induction of systemic cytotoxic responses. Rather the persistence of higher CD4+ Th1 responses, a high intratumoral recruitment of functional CD8+ T cells, and a low proportion of regulatory T cells correlate with tumor rejection.

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Year:  2008        PMID: 18369621     DOI: 10.1007/s00262-008-0500-y

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Cancer Immunol Immunother        ISSN: 0340-7004            Impact factor:   6.968


  6 in total

1.  Dendritic cells in cancer immunotherapy: vaccines or autologous transplants?

Authors:  Pawel Kalinski; Howard Edington; Herbert J Zeh; Hideho Okada; Lisa H Butterfield; John M Kirkwood; David L Bartlett
Journal:  Immunol Res       Date:  2011-08       Impact factor: 2.829

2.  Targeting the tumor microenvironment with anti-neu/anti-CD40 conjugated nanoparticles for the induction of antitumor immune responses.

Authors:  Ana Lucia Dominguez; Joseph Lustgarten
Journal:  Vaccine       Date:  2009-11-18       Impact factor: 3.641

3.  Early gene expression analysis in 9L orthotopic tumor-bearing rats identifies immune modulation in molecular response to synchrotron microbeam radiation therapy.

Authors:  Audrey Bouchet; Nathalie Sakakini; Michèle El Atifi; Céline Le Clec'h; Elke Brauer; Anaïck Moisan; Pierre Deman; Pascal Rihet; Géraldine Le Duc; Laurent Pelletier
Journal:  PLoS One       Date:  2013-12-31       Impact factor: 3.240

4.  Immunogenicity is preferentially induced in sparse dendritic cell cultures.

Authors:  Aikaterini Nasi; Vishnu Priya Bollampalli; Meng Sun; Yang Chen; Sylvie Amu; Susanne Nylén; Liv Eidsmo; Antonio Gigliotti Rothfuchs; Bence Réthi
Journal:  Sci Rep       Date:  2017-03-09       Impact factor: 4.379

Review 5.  Dendritic Cell Vaccination of Glioblastoma: Road to Success or Dead End.

Authors:  Angeliki Datsi; Rüdiger V Sorg
Journal:  Front Immunol       Date:  2021-11-02       Impact factor: 7.561

6.  Profound tumor-specific Th2 bias in patients with malignant glioma.

Authors:  Shinji Shimato; Lisa M Maier; Richard Maier; Jeffrey N Bruce; Richard C E Anderson; David E Anderson
Journal:  BMC Cancer       Date:  2012-11-27       Impact factor: 4.430

  6 in total

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