Monoclonal Antibody-Mediated Tumor Regression by Induction of Apoptosis

B. C. Trauth(German Cancer Research Center), C Klas(German Cancer Research Center), Anke Peters(German Cancer Research Center), S. Matzku(German Cancer Research Center), Peter Mӧller(Heidelberg University), Werner Falk(German Cancer Research Center), Klaus‐Michael Debatin(Heidelberg University), Peter H. Krammer(German Cancer Research Center)
Science
July 21, 1989
Cited by 1,731Open Access
Full Text

Abstract

To characterize cell surface molecules involved in control of growth of malignant lymphocytes, monoclonal antibodies were raised against the human B lymphoblast cell line SKW6.4. One monoclonal antibody, anti-APO-1, reacted with a 52-kilodalton antigen (APO-1) on a set of activated human lymphocytes, on malignant human lymphocyte lines, and on some patient-derived leukemic cells. Nanogram quantities of anti-APO-1 completely blocked proliferation of cells bearing APO-1 in vitro in a manner characteristic of a process called programmed cell death or apoptosis. Cell death was preceded by changes in cell morphology and fragmentation of DNA. This process was distinct from antibody- and complement-dependent cell lysis and was mediated by the antibody alone. A single intravenous injection of anti-APO-1 into nu/nu mice carrying a xenotransplant of a human B cell tumor induced regression of this tumor within a few days. Histological thin sections of the regressing tumor showed that anti-APO-1 was able to induce apoptosis in vivo. Thus, induction of apoptosis as a consequence of a signal mediated through cell surface molecules like APO-1 may be a useful therapeutic approach in treatment of malignancy.


Related Papers

No related papers found

Powered by citation graph analysis