In vivo antitumor activity of T cells redirected with chimeric antibody/T-cell receptor genes.

Patrick Hwu(National Cancer Institute), James C. Yang(National Institutes of Health), R Cowherd(National Institutes of Health), Jonathan Treisman(National Institutes of Health), GE Shafer(National Institutes of Health), Zelig Eshhar(Weizmann Institute of Science), Steven A. Rosenberg(National Institutes of Health)
PubMed
August 1, 1995
Cited by 275

Abstract

In an effort to broaden the applicability of adoptive cellular immunotherapy toward nonmelanoma cancers, we have designed chimeric antibody/T-cell receptor genes composed of the variable domains from mAbs joined to T-cell receptor-signaling chains. We have demonstrated that T cells retrovirally transduced with these genes can recognize antibody-defined antigens and that this recognition leads to T-cell activation, specific lysis, and cytokine release. In this study, we have examined the in vivo activity of murine T cells transduced with a chimeric receptor gene (MOv-gamma) derived from the mAb MOv18, which binds to a folate-binding protein overexpressed on most human ovarian adenocarcinomas. Nude mice that were given i.p. implants of human ovarian cancer (IGROV) cells were treated 3 days later with i.p. murine tumor-infiltrating lymphocytes (TIL) derived from an unrelated tumor. Mice treated with MOv-gamma-transduced TIL (MOv-TIL) had significantly increased survival compared to mice treated with saline only, nontransduced TIL, or TIL transduced with a control anti-trinitrophenyl chimeric receptor gene (TNP-TIL). In another model, C57BL/6 mice were given i.v. injections of a syngeneic methylcholanthrene-induced sarcoma transduced with the folate-binding protein (FBP) gene. Three days later, mice were treated i.v. with various transduced murine TIL (derived from an unrelated tumor), followed by low-dose systemic interleukin 2. Eleven days after tumor injection, mice were sacrificed, and lung metastases were counted. In multiple experiments, mice receiving MOv-TIL had significantly fewer lung metastases than did mice treated with interleukin 2 alone, nontransduced TIL, or TNP-TIL. These studies indicate that T cells can be gene modified to react in vivo against tumor antigens, defined by mAbs. This approach is potentially applicable to a number of neoplastic and infectious diseases and may allow adoptive immunotherapy against types of cancer not previously amenable to cellular immunotherapy.


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