Interleukin-7-Dependent Expansion and Persistence of Melanoma-Specific T Cells in Lymphodepleted Mice Lead to Tumor Regression and Editing

Lixin Wang(Providence Portland Medical Center), Rui Li(Providence Portland Medical Center), Guojun Yang(Providence Portland Medical Center), May Lim(Providence Portland Medical Center), Aisling O’Hara(Providence Portland Medical Center), Yiwei Chu(Shanghai Medical College of Fudan University), Bernard A. Fox(Center of Molecular Immunology (Cuba)), Nicholas P. Restifo(National Cancer Institute), Walter J. Urba(Providence Portland Medical Center), Hong‐Ming Hu(Providence Portland Medical Center)
Cancer Research
November 15, 2005
Cited by 83

Abstract

Active-specific immunotherapy with dendritic cells loaded with peptide derived from the melanoma antigen, gp100, failed to mediate regression of established B16F10 melanoma in normal mice. Dendritic cell vaccination induced activation and subsequent deletion of adoptively transferred naive CD8+ T-cell receptor transgenic (pmel-1) T cells specific for gp100 in normal mice. In lymphodepleted mice, dendritic cell vaccination produced greater T-cell expansion, long-term persistence of memory T cells, and tumor regression. Most tumors that persisted in the presence of functional memory T cells had either lost or exhibited reduced expression of MHC class I or gp100 proteins. In contrast to other naive T cells, pmel-1 T cells adoptively transferred to lymphodepleted mice exhibited faster proliferation and a more differentiated phenotype after exposure to peptide-pulsed dendritic cells. Proliferation and persistence of pmel-1 T cells was highly dependent on interleukin-7 (IL-7) in irradiated mice, and IL-15 when IL-7 was neutralized, two critical homeostatic cytokines produced in response to the irradiation-induced lymphodepletion.


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