Dendritic cells loaded with stressed tumor cells elicit long-lasting protective tumor immunity in mice depleted of CD4+CD25+ regulatory T cells

被引:122
作者
Prasad, SJ [1 ]
Farrand, KJ [1 ]
Matthews, SA [1 ]
Chang, JH [1 ]
McHugh, RS [1 ]
Ronchese, F [1 ]
机构
[1] Malaghan Inst Med Res, Wellington, New Zealand
关键词
D O I
10.4049/jimmunol.174.1.90
中图分类号
R392 [医学免疫学]; Q939.91 [免疫学];
学科分类号
100102 ;
摘要
Dendritic cell (DC)-based vaccination represents a promising approach to harness the specificity and potency of the immune system to combat cancer. Finding optimal strategies for tumor Ag preparation and subsequent pulsing of DC, as well as improving the immunogenicity of weak tumor Ags remain among the first challenges of this approach. In this report, we use a prophylactic vaccine consisting of DC loaded with whole, nonmanipulated B16-F10 melanoma cells that had been stressed by beat shock and gamma irradiation. Stressed B16-F10 cells underwent apoptosis and were internalized by bone marrow-derived DC during coculture. Surprisingly, coculture of DC with stressed B16-F10 undergoing apoptosis and necrosis did not induce DC maturation. However, a marked retardation in tumor growth was observed in C57BL/6 mice immunized using DC loaded with stressed B16-F10 cells and subsequently challenged with B16-F10 cells. Growth retardation was further increased by treating DC with LPS before in vivo administration. In vivo depletion studies revealed that both CD8(+) and CD4(+) T cells played a critical role in retarding tumor growth. In addition, treatment with anti-CD25 Ab to deplete CD4(+)CD25(+) regulatory T cells before DC vaccination considerably improved the effect of the vaccine and allowed the development of long-lived immune responses that were tumor protective. Our results demonstrate that depletion of regulatory T cells is an effective approach to improving the success of DC-based vaccination against weakly immunogenic tumors. Such a strategy can be readily applied to other tumor models and extended to therapeutic vaccination settings.
引用
收藏
页码:90 / 98
页数:9
相关论文
共 63 条
[21]   Stressed apoptotic tumor cells stimulate dendritic cells and induce specific cytotoxic T cells [J].
Feng, HP ;
Zeng, Y ;
Graner, MW ;
Katsanis, E .
BLOOD, 2002, 100 (12) :4108-4115
[22]  
FIDLER IJ, 1975, CANCER RES, V35, P218
[23]   Murine dendritic cells pulsed with whole tumor lysates mediate potent antitumor immune responses in vitro and in vivo [J].
Fields, RC ;
Shimizu, K ;
Mulé, JJ .
PROCEEDINGS OF THE NATIONAL ACADEMY OF SCIENCES OF THE UNITED STATES OF AMERICA, 1998, 95 (16) :9482-9487
[24]   Dendritic cells in cancer immunotherapy [J].
Fong, L ;
Engleman, EG .
ANNUAL REVIEW OF IMMUNOLOGY, 2000, 18 :245-273
[25]   Functional comparison of spleen dendritic cells and dendritic cells cultured in vitro from bone marrow precursors [J].
Garrigan, K ;
MoroniRawson, P ;
McMurray, C ;
Hermans, I ;
Abernethy, N ;
Watson, J ;
Ronchese, F .
BLOOD, 1996, 88 (09) :3508-3512
[26]  
Geiger JD, 2001, CANCER RES, V61, P8513
[27]   Dendritic cells charged with apoptotic tumor cells induce long-lived protective CD4+ and CD8+ T cell immunity against B16 melanoma [J].
Goldszmid, RS ;
Idoyaga, J ;
Bravo, AI ;
Steinman, R ;
Mordoh, J ;
Wainstok, R .
JOURNAL OF IMMUNOLOGY, 2003, 171 (11) :5940-5947
[28]   Blockade of CD28/B7 co-stimulation by mCTLA4-H gamma 1 inhibits antigen-induced lung eosinophilia but not Th2 cell development or recruitment in the lung [J].
Harris, N ;
Campbell, C ;
LeGros, G ;
Ronchese, F .
EUROPEAN JOURNAL OF IMMUNOLOGY, 1997, 27 (01) :155-161
[29]   CD8+ T cell-dependent elimination of dendritic cells in vivo limits the induction of antitumor immunity [J].
Hermans, IF ;
Ritchie, DS ;
Yang, JP ;
Roberts, JM ;
Ronchese, F .
JOURNAL OF IMMUNOLOGY, 2000, 164 (06) :3095-3101
[30]   Generation of T cells specific for the wild-type sequence p53264-272 peptide in cancer patients:: Implications for immunoselection of epitope loss variants [J].
Hoffmann, TK ;
Nakano, K ;
Elder, EM ;
Dworacki, G ;
Finkelstein, SD ;
Appella, E ;
Whiteside, TL ;
DeLeo, AB .
JOURNAL OF IMMUNOLOGY, 2000, 165 (10) :5938-5944