The Infection of Human Dendritic Cells with Recombinant Avipox Vectors Expressing a Costimulatory Molecule Transgene (CD80) to Enhance the Activation of …

KY Tsang, MZ Zhu, J Even, J Gulley, P Arlen, J Schlom - Cancer research, 2001 - AACR
KY Tsang, MZ Zhu, J Even, J Gulley, P Arlen, J Schlom
Cancer research, 2001AACR
Human dendritic cells (DCs) express MHC class I and II molecules and several T-cell
costimulatory molecules that contribute to their efficiency as antigen-presenting cells (APCs).
Whereas most human DC populations uniformly express some costimulatory molecules
such as B7-2 (CD86), previous studies have shown a wide variation in the expression of B7-
1 (CD80) among different human DC preparations. In the studies reported here, we
demonstrate that replication-defective avipox vectors expressing B7-1 can be used to rapidly …
Abstract
Human dendritic cells (DCs) express MHC class I and II molecules and several T-cell costimulatory molecules that contribute to their efficiency as antigen-presenting cells (APCs). Whereas most human DC populations uniformly express some costimulatory molecules such as B7-2 (CD86), previous studies have shown a wide variation in the expression of B7-1 (CD80) among different human DC preparations. In the studies reported here, we demonstrate that replication-defective avipox vectors expressing B7-1 can be used to rapidly and efficiently infect human DCs and can enhance the efficacy of human DCs to activate specific human T-cell populations. This has been demonstrated both in systems using peptide as a source of signal 1 and in systems using recombinant avipox vector to deliver signal 1. The antigen used in these studies was the tumor-associated human carcinoembryonic antigen (CEA). An immunodominant 9-mer CTL epitope for CEA (designated CAP-1) has been previously characterized (K. Y. Tsang et al., J. Natl. Cancer Inst. (Bethesda), 87: 982–990, 1995). The source of signal 1 used in these studies was (a) the CAP-1 peptide; (b) recombinant avipox-CEA; or (c) the dual transgene recombinant avipox-CEA/B7-1. These studies demonstrate that CEA-specific T cells are more efficiently activated using as APCs peptide-pulsed DCs infected with avipox-B7-1, as compared with peptide-pulsed DCs infected with wild-type vector, or with uninfected peptide-pulsed DCs. Greater activation of CEA-specific T cells was also obtained using as APCs DCs that were infected with avipox-CEA/B7-1 as compared with the use of DCs infected with avipox-CEA. A CEA tetramer was also used to isolate high- and low-tetramer-binding CEA-specific T-cell populations. Although both high- and low-tetramer-binding T cells had the ability to lyse CEA peptide-pulsed targets, only the high-tetramer-binding T cells had the ability to lyse colon carcinoma cells expressing CEA, which suggests the existence of tetramer-binding populations with different T-cell receptor (TCR) affinities. The demonstrated safety of recombinant avipox vectors in humans and the previously demonstrated ability to administer them multiple times without host immune response limitations indicate that these vectors expressing B7-1 have a potential use in enhancing the efficacy of human DC immunotherapy protocols using either peptide or recombinant vector to deliver signal 1.
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