| Literature DB >> 19105207 |
Jasmin T Ney1, Thomas Schmidt, Christian Kurts, Qi Zhou, Dawid Eckert, Dean W Felsher, Hubert Schorle, Percy Knolle, Thomas Tüting, Winfried Barchet, Reinhard Büttner, Andreas Limmer, Ines Gütgemann.
Abstract
The reason the adaptive immune system fails in advanced liver tumors is largely unclear. To address this question, we have developed a novel murine model that combines c-myc-induced autochthonous tumorigenesis with expression of a cognate antigen, ovalbumin (OVA). When c-myc/OVA transgenic mice were crossed with liver-specific inducer mice, multifocal hepatocellular carcinomas co-expressing OVA developed in a tetracycline-dependent manner with a short latency and 100% penetrance. Transferred OVA-specific T cells, although infiltrating the tumor at high numbers, were hyporesponsive, as evidenced by a lack of in vivo cytotoxicity and interferon gamma production. This allowed the tumor to progress even in the presence of large numbers of antigen-specific T cells and even after vaccination (OVA+CpG-DNA). Interestingly, T cell receptor down-modulation was observed, which may explain antigen-specific hyporesponsiveness. This model is helpful in understanding liver cancer-specific mechanisms of T cell tolerance and dissection of antigen-specific and nonspecific mechanisms of immunotherapies in the preclinical phase.Entities:
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Year: 2009 PMID: 19105207 DOI: 10.1002/hep.22652
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Hepatology ISSN: 0270-9139 Impact factor: 17.425