| Literature DB >> 9679976 |
S P Schoenberger1, L E Jonges, R J Mooijaart, F Hartgers, R E Toes, W M Kast, C J Melief, R Offringa.
Abstract
Although numerous studies have documented a role for B7-1 (CD80) in the induction of antitumor CTL immunity, it is presently unclear to what extent expression of this costimulatory molecule truly endows tumors with significant in vivo APC (antigen-presenting cell) capacity. Recent studies have, in fact, demonstrated that cross-priming, rather than direct priming, may constitute the major mechanism of CTL induction by B7-1 expressing tumors. We have, therefore, investigated the requirements for antigen density and costimulatory molecules in direct CTL priming with a prototype cell-based vaccine that uses a signal sequence-containing minigene to direct expression of a tumor-specific CTL epitope to the endoplasmic reticulum. This design limits sources of antigen available to professional APC in the host and, thereby, the contribution of cross-priming. Induction of antitumor CTL immunity by our prototype APC was shown to solely involve direct priming, independent of host APC, NKI.1+ cells, and CD4+ T cell help. CTL induction through this mechanism required the engineered APC to express the B7-1 molecule as well as a sufficiently high density of peptide/MHC complexes at its surface. Our data, in contrast to previous studies using modified tumor cells, clearly define the antigenic and costimulatory requirements for a suitably engineered "artificial" APC to directly prime peptide-specific CTL in vivo, and demonstrate that the signal sequence minigene approach allows the engineering of highly effective and well-defined cellular vaccines for activation of CTL against epitopes of choice.Entities:
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Year: 1998 PMID: 9679976
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Cancer Res ISSN: 0008-5472 Impact factor: 12.701