Treatment of Established Renal Cancer by Tumor Cells Engineered to Secrete Interleukin-4

Paul T. Golumbek(Johns Hopkins University), Audrey J. Lazenby(Johns Hopkins University), Hyam I. Levitsky(Johns Hopkins University), Liz Jaffee(Johns Hopkins University), Hajime Karasuyama(The University of Tokyo), Mitzi Baker(Johns Hopkins University), Drew M. Pardoll(Johns Hopkins University)
Science
November 1, 1991
Cited by 731

Abstract

The generation of antigen-specific antitumor immunity is the ultimate goal in cancer immunotherapy. When cells from a spontaneously arising murine renal cell tumor were engineered to secrete large doses of interleukin-4 (IL-4) locally, they were rejected in a predominantly T cell-independent manner. However, animals that rejected the IL-4-transfected tumors developed T cell-dependent systemic immunity to the parental tumor. This systemic immunity was tumor-specific and primarily mediated by CD8+ T cells. Established parental tumors could be cured by the systemic immune response generated by injection of the genetically engineered tumors. These results provide a rationale for the use of lymphokine gene-transfected tumor cells as a modality for cancer therapy.


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