Fassnacht M et al. (AUG 2005)
Clinical cancer research : an official journal of the American Association for Cancer Research 11 15 5566--71
Induction of CD4(+) and CD8(+) T-cell responses to the human stromal antigen, fibroblast activation protein: implication for cancer immunotherapy.
PURPOSE: The propensity of tumor cells to escape immune elimination could limit,if not defeat,the long-term benefits of effective immunotherapeutic protocols. Immunologic targeting of tumor stroma could significantly reduce the ability of tumors to evade immune elimination. Murine studies have shown that inducing immunity against angiogenesis-associated products engenders potent antitumor immunity without significant pathology. It is,however,not known whether T cells corresponding to stromal products are present in humans. In this study,we describe a method to screen for human stromal products that have not triggered significant tolerance and could therefore serve as candidate antigens for cancer immunotherapy. EXPERIMENTAL DESIGN: To identify candidates for human stromal antigens,we used an in vitro-screening method to determine whether dendritic cells transfected with mRNA encoding products,which are overexpressed in the tumor stroma,are capable of stimulating cytotoxic CD8(+) (CTL) responses from human peripheral blood mononuclear cells. RESULTS: CTL responses could be consistently generated against fibroblast activation protein (FAP) but not against matrix metalloproteinase-9 (MMP-9) or MMP-14. To enhance the immunogenicity of the mRNA-translated FAP product,a lysosomal targeting signal derived from lysosome-associated membrane protein-1 (LAMP-1) was fused to the COOH terminus of FAP to redirect the translated product into the class II presentation pathway. Dendritic cells transfected with mRNA encoding the FAP-LAMP fusion product stimulated enhanced CD4(+) and CD8(+) T-cell responses. CONCLUSION: This study identifies FAP,a protease preferentially expressed in tumor-associated fibroblasts,as a candidate human stromal antigen to target in the setting of cancer immunotherapy,and shows that differential expression of stromal products is not a sufficient criteria to indicate its immunogenicity in a vaccination setting.
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Pulle G et al. (MAR 2006)
Journal of immunology (Baltimore,Md. : 1950) 176 5 2739--48
IL-15-dependent induction of 4-1BB promotes antigen-independent CD8 memory T cell survival.
Mice lacking CD137L (4-1BBL) show normal primary expansion and contraction of the CD8+ T cell response to influenza virus,but exhibit a defect in Ag-specific CD8+ T cell numbers at 3-6 wk postinfection. Previous results showed that the decrease in CD8+ T cell numbers in this model is not due to a programming defect during primary expansion. Thus,it appears that 4-1BB/4-1BBL interactions control the number of surviving CD8+ effector memory cells,late in the primary response. In this report,we asked how 4-1BB on T cells could play a role after Ag has apparently been cleared from the host. We show that IL-15,a cytokine involved in regulation of CD8+ memory T cell survival,induces the expression of 4-1BB on CD8+CD44(high) memory phenotype T cells,but not on CD4+ T cells. The Ag-independent induction of 4-1BB by IL-15 was dependent on MAPK p38 and ERK activation. Transfer of in vitro-generated OT-I CD8+ memory T cells into unimmunized wild-type or 4-1BBL-deficient hosts revealed a 2- to 3-fold survival advantage when 4-1BBL was present,recapitulating the effect seen in the endogenous response to influenza in mice. Decreases in the overall number of memory CD8+ T cells were also observed in the bone marrow of unmanipulated 4-1BBL-deficient mice. These data suggest a model whereby 4-1BB expression on memory CD8+ T cells,perhaps due to encounter with IL-15 in the bone marrow,allows 4-1BB/4-1BBL interactions to maintain memory CD8 T cell survival in the absence of Ag.
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Li J et al. (MAR 2006)
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America 103 10 3557--62
Human antibodies for immunotherapy development generated via a human B cell hybridoma technology.
Current strategies for the production of therapeutic mAbs include the use of mammalian cell systems to recombinantly produce Abs derived from mice bearing human Ig transgenes,humanization of rodent Abs,or phage libraries. Generation of hybridomas secreting human mAbs has been previously reported; however,this approach has not been fully exploited for immunotherapy development. We previously reported the use of transient regulation of cellular DNA mismatch repair processes to enhance traits (e.g.,affinity and titers) of mAb-producing cell lines,including hybridomas. We reasoned that this process,named morphogenics,could be used to improve suboptimal hybridoma cells generated by means of ex vivo immunization and immortalization of antigen-specific human B cells for therapeutic Ab development. Here we present a platform process that combines hybridoma and morphogenics technologies for the generation of fully human mAbs specific for disease-associated human antigens. We were able to generate hybridoma lines secreting mAbs with high binding specificity and biological activity. One mAb with strong neutralizing activity against human granulocyte-macrophage colony-stimulating factor was identified that is now considered for preclinical development for autoimmune disease indications. Moreover,these hybridoma cells have proven suitable for genetic optimization using the morphogenics process and have shown potential for large-scale manufacturing.
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Staton PJ et al. (APR 2006)
Journal of immunology (Baltimore,Md. : 1950) 176 7 3978--86
IL-7 is a critical factor in modulating lesion development in Skn-directed autoimmunity.
In a murine model of autoimmunity targeted against the epidermal cell Ags,Skn,adoptive transfer of Skn-immune T cells to immunosuppressed recipients elicits skin lesions in areas of mild epidermal trauma. In this study,we examined peripheral regulation of Skn-induced autoreactivity disrupted by rendering the mice immunoincompetent. We found that regulation of Skn-directed autoimmunity was restored by cotransfer of normal syngeneic spleen cells at twice the concentration of Skn-immune cells and was evidenced by significantly reduced lesion severity by days 5-7 post-cotransfer compared with animals given injections of Skn-immune cells alone. Enrichment and depletion of normal CD4(+) or CD8(+) spleen cells and RT-PCR analysis of selected cytokines identified CD4(+) cells as the regulatory cells in the cotransfer inoculum; however,significant reduction in lesion severity was observed only when there was a concomitant increase in levels of IL-7. The role of IL-7 was further supported in that mice cotransferred with Skn-immune cells plus normal spleen cells,but also treated with anti-IL-7 Ab,no longer exhibited reduced lesion severity. To determine whether IL-7 expression without normal spleen cell cotransfer could modulate lesion development,an IL-7-encoding plasmid (pCMV-Tag1-IL-7) was topically delivered to sites flanking the stressed skin site in Skn-induced autoimmune mice. Daily application of 15 mug of pCMV-Tag1-IL-7 significantly suppressed lesion severity. Our results support a mechanism for CD4(+) T cells and IL-7 in contributing to the control of autoreactivity.
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Obar JJ et al. (SEP 2006)
Journal of virology 80 17 8303--15
In herpesvirus infections,the virus persists for life but is contained through T-cell-mediated immune surveillance. How this immune surveillance operates is poorly understood. Recent studies of other persistent infections have indicated that virus persistence is associated with functional deficits in the CD8(+) T-cell response. To test whether this is the case in a herpesvirus infection,we used a mutant murine gammaherpesvirus that is defective in its ability to persist in the host. By comparing the immune response to this virus with a revertant virus that can persist,we were able to dissect the changes in the antiviral CD8(+) T-cell response that are induced by virus persistence. Surprisingly,persistently infected mice controlled a secondary challenge infection more rapidly than nonpersistently infected mice,indicating enhanced rather than diminished effector functions. Consistent with this,virus-specific CD8 T cells from these mice exhibited faster upregulation of the cytotoxic mediator granzyme B. Another unexpected finding was that CD8(+) T cells from neither infection responded efficiently to homeostatic cytokines. The unresponsiveness of the memory cells from the nonpersistently infected mice appears to be linked to the prolonged replication of virus within the lungs. Other changes seen in different chronic infection models were also observed,such as changes in Bcl-2 levels,interleukin-2 production,and the immunodominance hierarchy. These data show persistence of gammaherpesvirus type 68 alters the properties of CD8(+) T cells and illustrates that immune surveillance does not require CD8 T cells with the same attributes as classical" memory CD8(+) T cells."
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Grimbert P et al. (SEP 2006)
Journal of immunology (Baltimore,Md. : 1950) 177 6 3534--41
Thrombospondin/CD47 interaction: a pathway to generate regulatory T cells from human CD4+ CD25- T cells in response to inflammation.
Thymus-derived CD4+ CD25+ T regulatory cells (Tregs) are essential for the maintenance of self-tolerance. What critical factors and conditions are required for the extra-thymic development of Tregs remains an important question. In this study,we show that the anti-inflammatory extracellular matrix protein,thrombospondin-1,promoted the generation of human peripheral regulatory T cells through the ligation of one of its receptor,CD47. CD47 stimulation by mAb or a thrombospondin-1 peptide induced naive or memory CD4+ CD25- T cells to become suppressive. The latter expressed increased amounts of CTLA-4,OX40,GITR,and Foxp3 and inhibited autologous Th0,Th1,and Th2 cells. Their regulatory activity was contact dependent,TGF-beta independent,and partially circumvented by IL-2. This previously unknown mechanism to induce human peripheral Tregs in response to inflammation may participate to the limitation of collateral damage induced by exacerbated responses to self or foreign Ags and thus be relevant for therapeutic intervention in autoimmune diseases and transplantation.
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Walker WE et al. (OCT 2006)
Journal of immunology (Baltimore,Md. : 1950) 177 8 5307--16
Absence of innate MyD88 signaling promotes inducible allograft acceptance.
Prior experimental strategies to induce transplantation tolerance have focused largely on modifying adaptive immunity. However,less is known concerning the role of innate immune signaling in the induction of transplantation tolerance. Using a highly immunogenic murine skin transplant model that resists transplantation tolerance induction when innate immunity is preserved,we show that absence of MyD88,a key innate Toll like receptor signal adaptor,abrogates this resistance and facilitates inducible allograft acceptance. In our model,absence of MyD88 impairs inflammatory dendritic cell responses that reduce T cell activation. This effect increases T cell susceptibility to suppression mediated by CD4+ CD25+ regulatory T cells. Therefore,this study provides evidence that absence of MyD88 promotes inducible allograft acceptance and implies that inhibiting innate immunity may be a potential,clinically relevant strategy to facilitate transplantation tolerance.
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Pua HH et al. (JAN 2007)
The Journal of experimental medicine 204 1 25--31
A critical role for the autophagy gene Atg5 in T cell survival and proliferation.
Macroautophagy (hereafter referred to as autophagy) is a well-conserved intracellular degradation process. Recent studies examining cells lacking the autophagy genes Atg5 and Atg7 have demonstrated that autophagy plays essential roles in cell survival during starvation,in innate cell clearance of microbial pathogens,and in neural cell maintenance. However,the role of autophagy in T lymphocyte development and survival is not known. Here,we demonstrate that autophagosomes form in primary mouse T lymphocytes. By generating Atg5-/- chimeric mice,we found that Atg5-deficient T lymphocytes underwent full maturation. However,the numbers of total thymocytes and peripheral T and B lymphocytes were reduced in Atg5 chimeras. In the periphery,Atg5-/- CD8+ T lymphocytes displayed dramatically increased cell death. Furthermore,Atg5-/- CD4+ and CD8+ T cells failed to undergo efficient proliferation after TCR stimulation. These results demonstrate a critical role for Atg5 in multiple aspects of lymphocyte development and function and suggest that autophagy may be essential for both T lymphocyte survival and proliferation.
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Nair S et al. (JAN 2007)
Cancer research 67 1 371--80
Vaccination against the forkhead family transcription factor Foxp3 enhances tumor immunity.
Depletion of CD4+CD25+ regulatory T cells (Treg) by treatment with alphaCD25 antibody synergizes with vaccination protocols to engender protective immunity in mice. The effectiveness of targeting CD25 to eliminate Treg is limited by the fact that CD25,the low-affinity interleukin-2 receptor,is up-regulated on conventional T cells. At present,foxp3 is the only product known to be exclusively expressed in Treg of mice. However,foxp3 is not expressed on the cell surface and hence cannot be targeted with antibodies. In this study,we tested the hypothesis that vaccination of mice against foxp3,a self-antigen expressed also in the thymus,is capable of stimulating foxp3-specific CTL that will cause the depletion of Treg and enhanced antitumor immunity. Vaccination of mice with foxp3 mRNA-transfected dendritic cells elicited a robust foxp3-specific CTL response and potentiated vaccine-induced protective immunity comparably with that of alphaCD25 antibody administration. In contrast to alphaCD25 antibody treatment,repeated foxp3 vaccination did not interfere with vaccine-induced protective immunity. Importantly,foxp3 vaccination led to the preferential depletion of foxp3-expressing Treg in the tumor but not in the periphery,whereas alphaCD25 antibody treatment led to depletion of Treg in both the tumor and the periphery. Targeting foxp3 by vaccination offers a specific and simpler protocol for the prolonged control of Treg that may be associated with reduced risk of autoimmunity,introducing an approach whereby specific depletion of cells is not limited to targeting products expressed on the cell surface.
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Pereira LE et al. (MAY 2007)
Journal of virology 81 9 4445--56
Simian immunodeficiency virus (SIV) infection influences the level and function of regulatory T cells in SIV-infected rhesus macaques but not SIV-infected sooty mangabeys.
Differences in clinical outcome of simian immunodeficiency virus (SIV) infection in disease-resistant African sooty mangabeys (SM) and disease-susceptible Asian rhesus macaques (RM) prompted us to examine the role of regulatory T cells (Tregs) in these two animal models. Results from a cross-sectional study revealed maintenance of the frequency and absolute number of peripheral Tregs in chronically SIV-infected SM while a significant loss occurred in chronically SIV-infected RM compared to uninfected animals. A longitudinal study of experimentally SIV-infected animals revealed a transient increase in the frequency of Tregs from baseline values following acute infection in RM,but no change in the frequency of Tregs occurred in SM during this period. Further examination revealed a strong correlation between plasma viral load (VL) and the level of Tregs in SIV-infected RM but not SM. A correlation was also noted in SIV-infected RM that control VL spontaneously or in response to antiretroviral chemotherapy. In addition,immunofluorescent cell count assays showed that while Treg-depleted peripheral blood mononuclear cells from RM led to a significant enhancement of CD4+ and CD8+ T-cell responses to select pools of SIV peptides,there was no detectable T-cell response to the same pool of SIV peptides in Treg-depleted cells from SIV-infected SM. Our data collectively suggest that while Tregs do appear to play a role in the control of viremia and the magnitude of the SIV-specific immune response in RM,their role in disease resistance in SM remains unclear.
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Billard E et al. (OCT 2007)
Infection and immunity 75 10 4980--9
Brucella suis prevents human dendritic cell maturation and antigen presentation through regulation of tumor necrosis factor alpha secretion.
Brucella is a facultative intracellular pathogen and the etiological agent of brucellosis. In some cases,human brucellosis results in a persistent infection that may reactivate years after the initial exposure. The mechanisms by which the parasite evades clearance by the immune response to chronically infect its host are unknown. We recently demonstrated that dendritic cells (DCs),which are critical components of adaptive immunity,are highly susceptible to Brucella infection and are a preferential niche for the development of the bacteria. Here,we report that in contrast to several intracellular bacteria,Brucella prevented the infected DCs from engaging in their maturation process and impaired their capacities to present antigen to naïve T cells and to secrete interleukin-12. Moreover,Brucella-infected DCs failed to release tumor necrosis factor alpha (TNF-alpha),a defect involving the bacterial protein Omp25. Exogenous TNF-alpha addition to Brucella-infected DCs restored cell maturation and allowed them to present antigens. Two avirulent mutants of B. suis,B. suis bvrR and B. suis omp25 mutants,which do not express the Omp25 protein,triggered TNF-alpha production upon DC invasion. Cells infected with these mutants subsequently matured and acquired the ability to present antigens,two properties which were dramatically impaired by addition of anti-TNF-alpha antibodies. In light of these data,we propose a model in which virulent Brucella alters the maturation and functions of DCs through Omp25-dependent control of TNF-alpha production. This model defines a specific evasion strategy of the bacteria by which they can escape the immune response to chronically infect their host.
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Lalli PN et al. (NOV 2007)
Journal of immunology (Baltimore,Md. : 1950) 179 9 5793--802
Decay accelerating factor can control T cell differentiation into IFN-gamma-producing effector cells via regulating local C5a-induced IL-12 production.
A newly recognized link between the complement system and adaptive immunity is that decay accelerating factor (DAF),a cell surface C3/C5 convertase regulator,exerts control over T cell responses. Extending these results,we show that cultures of Marilyn TCR-transgenic T cells stimulated with DAF-deficient (Daf1(-/-)) APCs produce significantly more IL-12,C5a,and IFN-gamma compared with cultures containing wild-type APCs. DAF-regulated IL-12 production and subsequent T cell differentiation into IFN-gamma-producing effectors was prevented by the deficiency of either C3 or C5a receptor (C5aR) in the APC,demonstrating a link between DAF,local complement activation,IL-12,and T cell-produced IFN-gamma. Bone marrow chimera experiments verified that bone marrow cell-expressed C5aR is required for optimal differentiation into IFN-gamma-producing effector T cells. Overall,our results indicate that APC-expressed DAF regulates local production/activation of C5a following cognate T cell/APC interactions. Through binding to its receptor on APCs the C5a up-regulates IL-12 production,this in turn,contributes to directing T cell differentiation toward an IFN-gamma-producing phenotype. The findings have implications for design of therapies aimed at altering pathologic T cell immunity.
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