Intratumoral injection of bone-marrow derived dendritic cells engineered to produce interleukin-12 induces complete regression of established murine transplantable colon adenocarcinomas

被引:107
作者
Melero, I [1 ]
Duarte, M [1 ]
Ruiz, J [1 ]
Sangro, B [1 ]
Galofré, JC [1 ]
Mazzolini, G [1 ]
Bustos, M [1 ]
Qian, C [1 ]
Prieto, J [1 ]
机构
[1] Univ Navarra, Fac Med, Dept Med Interna, Pamplona 31008, Spain
关键词
dendritic cell; interleukin-12; colon cancer; adenovirus; CTLs;
D O I
10.1038/sj.gt.3301010
中图分类号
Q5 [生物化学]; Q7 [分子生物学];
学科分类号
071010 ; 081704 ;
摘要
Stimulation of the antitumor immune response by dendritic cells (DC) is critically dependent on their tightly regulated ability to produce interleukin-12 (IL-12). To enhance this effect artificially, bone marrow (BM)-derived DG were genetically engineered to produce high levels of functional IL-12 by ex vivo infection with a recombinant defective adenovirus (AdCMVIL-12). DC-expressing IL-12 injected into the malignant tissue eradicated 50-100% well established malignant nodules derived from the injection of two murine colon adenocarcinoma cell lines. Successful therapy was; dependent on IL-12 transfection and was mediated only by syngeneic, but not allogeneic BM-derived DG, indicating that compatible antigen-presenting molecules were required. The antitumor effect was inhibited by in vivo depletion of CD8(+) T cells and completely abrogated by simultaneous depletion with anti-CD4 and anti-CD8 mAbs. Mice which had undergone tumor regression remained immune to a rechallenge with tumor cells, showing the achievement of long-lasting systemic immunity that also was able to reject simultaneously induced concomitant untreated tumors. Tumor regression was associated with a detectable CTL response directed against tumor-specific antigens probably captured by DC artificially released inside tumor nodules. Our results open the possibility of similarly treating the corresponding human malignancies.
引用
收藏
页码:1779 / 1784
页数:6
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