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The distinct role of CD4+ and CD8+ T-cells during the anti-tumour effects of targeted superantigens
Authors
A Aruga
A Rahemtulla
+52 more
A Rosendahl
A Rosendahl
A Rosendahl
A Rosendahl
A Sher
A Sundstedt
Charles A. Janeway
D Kagi
DE Kern
DF Fiorentino
F Willems
H Groux
H Groux
IG Schmidt Wolf
IP Oswald
J Andersson
J Dhein
J White
Jan Andersson
JL Pace
JP Klarnet
L Ding
L Fitzpatrick
L Ohlsson
M Battegay
M Dohlsten
M Dohlsten
M Dohlsten
M Dohlsten
M Dohlsten
M Dohlsten
M Giovarelli
M J Litton
M Kahn
M Søgaard
M T Scherer
MA Coppola
MJ Litton
MJ Litton
MJ Litton
MP Langford
NR Krieger
R de Waal Malefyt
R de Waal Malefyt
SA Rosenberg
SS Hom
T Herrmann
T Yoshimoto
TR Mosmann
U Andersson
WP Fung Leung
WT Lee
Publication date
Publisher
Nature Publishing Group
Doi
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on
PubMed
Abstract
To target T-cells to the tumour area we created a recombinant protein of the bacterial superantigen (SAg) Staphylococcal enterotoxin A (SEA) and the Fab-fragment of a tumour-reactive antibody. This antibody-targeted SAg immunotherapy therapy has been shown to be highly efficient, eliminating > 95% of the pulmonary metastasis in mice carrying established melanoma micrometastases. Earlier studies demonstrated that elimination of the C215-expressing B16-melanoma lung metastasis was dependent on interferon (IFN)-γ release and expression of perforin. In the present study, therapeutic effector functions were analysed both locally at the tumour site and systemically in the spleen. In order to elucidate the role of each T-cell subset during Fab–SEA therapy, CD4 knock-out (KO) and CD8 KO mice were used. Tumour size reduction was statistically significant in Fab–SEA-based tumour therapy in both types of T-cell-deficient mice compared to wild-type mice. CD4 KO mice displayed a drastic reduction in the number of tumour-infiltrating macrophages and CD8+ T-cells. Therapy-induced accumulation of perforin-containing cells at the tumour site was significantly impaired in CD8 KO mice, and marginally in CD4 KO mice. Moreover, CD4 KO mice failed to produce substantial amounts of the tumour suppressive cytokine IFN-γ. This is in sharp contrast to normal mice where a massive local release was recorded. CD8 KO mice displayed a spontaneous production of interleukin (IL)-4 and IL-10 locally in the tumour. Neither normal nor CD4 KO mice produced detectable levels of these Th-2-associated cytokines. The high level of IL-10 was demonstrated to inhibit Fab–SEA tumour therapy, since the therapeutic efficacy was significantly higher in IL-10 KO mice. These results illustrate the importance of a finely tuned cellular collaboration to regulate the various phases of an efficient anti-tumour immune response. © 1999 Cancer Research Campaig
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Last time updated on 03/12/2019