| Literature DB >> 20625438 |
Knut Liseth1, Elisabeth Ersvaer, Tor Hervig, Øystein Bruserud.
Abstract
In vitro studies have demonstrated that cancer-specific T cell cytotoxicity can be induced both ex vivo and in vivo, but this therapeutic strategy should probably be used as an integrated part of a cancer treatment regimen. Initial chemotherapy should be administered to reduce the cancer cell burden and disease-induced immune defects. This could be followed by autologous stem cell transplantation that is a safe procedure including both high-dose disease-directed chemotherapy and the possibility for ex vivo enrichment of the immunocompetent graft cells. The most intensive conventional chemotherapy and stem cell transplantation are used especially in the treatment of aggressive hematologic malignancies; both strategies induce T cell defects that may last for several months but cancer-specific T cell reactivity is maintained after both procedures. Enhancement of anticancer T cell cytotoxicity is possible but posttransplant vaccination therapy should probably be combined with optimalisation of immunoregulatory networks. Such combinatory regimens should be suitable for patients with aggressive hematological malignancies and probably also for other cancer patients.Entities:
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Year: 2010 PMID: 20625438 PMCID: PMC2896720 DOI: 10.1155/2010/692097
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Biomed Biotechnol ISSN: 1110-7243
Cryopreservation of autologous peripheral blood stem cell grafts in cancer patients; a summary of the effects on immunocompetent cells when grafts were prepared with 2%, 4%, 5%, and 10% DMSO.
| T cell population | Functional characteristics | Effects of cryopreservation with DMSO at various concentrations |
|---|---|---|
| Major T cell subsets | ||
| CD3+CD4+ | T helper | No effect of different DMSO levels |
| CD3+CD8+ | Cytotoxic | No effect of different DMSO levels |
| CD3+CD56+CD16+ | NK T cells | Highest viability with 2% DMSO |
| CD3+CD56+CD16− | NK T cells | Highest viability with 2% DMSO |
| CD62L-defined subsets | ||
| CD4+CD62+, CD8+CD62+ | Naive and central memory | Highest viability when using DMSO 5% |
| CD4+CD62low, CD8+CD62low | Late effector T cells | CD4+ cells show highest viability with DMSO 2% and 4% |
| CD4+CD62−, CD8+CD62− | Effector memory | No effect of different DMSO levels |
| Subsets defined by chemokine receptor expression | ||
| CD4+CCR7+, CD8+CCR7+ | Naive and central memory T cells | The CD4+ cells showed decreased viability when using 10% DMSO |
| CD3+CD45+CCR4−CCR6− | Decreased viability when using 2% DMSO | |
| Other CCR2, CCR4, CCR7 | No effect of different DMSO levels | |
| defined T cell subsets | ||
| CD4+CD25+FoxP3+ T cells | Natural regulatory T cells | Decreased viability when using 10% DMSO |
Autografts were prepared for cancer patients after mobilisation with chemotherapy plus G-CSF. After the aphereses cell concentrations were adjusted and cells stored in nitrogen for 5-6 years as described in the text [50].
T cell reconstitution after autologous stem cell transplantation.
| Immunocompetent cell | Time until reconstitution |
|---|---|
| Number of circulating CD4+ T cells | 1–5 years |
| Number of circulating CD8+ T cells | 3–12 months |
| T cell proliferation | 3 months–5 years |
| T cell cytokine production | 6 months–5 years |
| T cell response to exogenous IL2 | 7 months–5 years |
| Cytotoxic T cells | 2 months–5 years |
Adapted from article by Porrata et al. [60]. In general there is considerable variability in the data that have been found for T cell reconstitution, both in-between patients and studies. Thus, the timeframes indicate when the majority of patients can expect to reach normal values.
Immunotherapy in AML; the advantages and disadvantages of the various approaches that have been investigated in clinical trials [82].
| Strategy | Advantage | Disadvantage |
|---|---|---|
| Peptide vaccination | Easy to produce and administer | Selection of patients with certain HLA types and high antigen expression in the malignant cells |
| Normal dendritic cells loaded with AML-associated peptides | Presentation of several leukemia-specific and leukemia-associated antigens | Work-consuming in vitro procedures for preparation and antigenic loading (lysates, mRNA). |
| Whole tumor cell vaccines with irradiated AML cells: | ||
| (i) Leukemic cells plus | ||
| systemic administration of | Relatively easy to prepare, several antigens presented | Clinical side effects |
| immunostimulatory | ||
| cytokines | ||
| (ii) Modified leukemic cells | Several antigens presented | Complicated and work-consuming ex vivo handling |
| expressing GM-CSF or | ||
| CD80+IL2 | ||
| Leukemic dendritic cells | Presentation of several leukemia-specific and leukemia-associated antigens | Heterogeneity between patients with regard to efficiency; work-consuming in vitro procedures for preparation and antigenic loading (lysates, mRNA). |
| IL-2 therapy | Easy to administer, induces innate and specific immunity | Serious side effects |
Figure 1Induction of immunogenic apoptosis. Certain chemotherapeutics agents (e.g., the anthracyclines) will induce immunogenic apoptosis in cancer cell through induction of Danger-Associated Molecular Patterns (DAMPs). Examples of DAMPs are various Heat shock proteins and ecto-calreticulin exposure on the cancer cell surface. This pattern will induce dendritic cell (DC) maturation with development of specific T helper cell responses and enhancement of cancer-specific T cell cytotoxicity.
Figure 2The immunostimulatory effect of TLR9 ligation by CpG oligonucleotides. (a) TLR9 is normally activated by nonmethylated CpG dinucleotides (DNA motifs). In vaccination therapy TLR9 can be activated by synthetic oligodeoxynucleotides (ODN) containing CpG motifs (CPG ODN), these molecules can be linked to antigenic peptides (Ag CpG ODN). This complex is endocytosed by dendritic cells (DC); the antigen is then presented and CpG ODN enhances the accessory cell function of the dendritic cells [105–107]. (b) Binding of CpG ODN by TLR9+ dendritic cells initiates signal transduction through members of the IL-1 receptor-associated kinase (IRAK) family, mitogen activated kinases (MAPK) or Interferon (IFN) regulatory factors. These events lead to activation of nuclear factor kappa B (NFκB) transcription factors with increased cytokine release and expression of costimulatory molecules [108]. (c) Inhibitory control mechanisms of CpG-mediated immune activation seem to include induction of IL-10, cyclooxygenase-2 (COX-2), NO synthase 2 (NOS-2) and prostaglandin E2 (PGE2). Intravenous administration of CpG ODN to mice induce splenic expression of the enzyme indoleamine 2,3-dioxygenase (IDO) that is an enzyme associated generation of regulatory T cells (Treg) and thereby inhibition of Th1 cells, cytotoxic T cells (Tc cells) and B cells [108].
Preparation of vaccines for lymphomas, an overview of possible methodological approaches [104].
| Procedure | Advantages |
|---|---|
| Improving antigen delivery | |
| DNA vaccines | Skin or muscle injection of cDNA encoding the antigen. Protein is endogenously produced, and the epitopes can be combined with sequences from the carrier proteins or adjuvant proteins that increase immunogenicity |
| Liposomal vaccines | Antigens are supposed to be delivered both for endosomal (CD4+ responses) and cytosolic processing (CD8+ responses), combination with adjuvant is possible and custom-made vaccines can rapidly be produced. |
| Increasing antigen presentation | |
| Normal dendritic cell vaccines | Dendritic cells are regarded as the most powerful antigen-presenting cells; the cells can be pulsed by either cell lysates, heat shock proteins with bound client proteins or apoptotic cell organelles. |
| CpG vaccines | Dendritic cells are activated via toll-like receptors; these antigen-presenting cells will take up cancer-derived peptides and this approach thereby bypasses the step of custom-made vaccines. One approach is pre-vaccination local therapy that induces apoptosis, and local CpG-injection will then enhance the uptake and presentation of peptides derived from malignant cells |
| Malignant dendritic cells | Can be prepared for various hematological malignancies; these cells will present several tumor-specific as well as tumor-associated antigens. |