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Preparing clinical-grade myeloid dendritic cells by electroporation-mediated transfection of in vitro amplified tumor-derived mRNA and safety testing in stage IV malignant melanoma

BACKGROUND: Dendritic cells (DCs) have been used as vaccines in clinical trials of immunotherapy of cancer and other diseases. Nonetheless, progress towards the use of DCs in the clinic has been slow due in part to the absence of standard methods for DC preparation and exposure to disease-associated...

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Autores principales: Markovic, Svetomir N, Dietz, Allan B, Greiner, Carl W, Maas, Mary L, Butler, Greg W, Padley, Douglas J, Bulur, Peggy A, Allred, Jacob B, Creagan, Edward T, Ingle, James N, Gastineau, Dennis A, Vuk-Pavlovic, Stanimir
Formato: Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: BioMed Central 2006
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC1570143/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/16911798
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1479-5876-4-35
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author Markovic, Svetomir N
Dietz, Allan B
Greiner, Carl W
Maas, Mary L
Butler, Greg W
Padley, Douglas J
Bulur, Peggy A
Allred, Jacob B
Creagan, Edward T
Ingle, James N
Gastineau, Dennis A
Vuk-Pavlovic, Stanimir
author_facet Markovic, Svetomir N
Dietz, Allan B
Greiner, Carl W
Maas, Mary L
Butler, Greg W
Padley, Douglas J
Bulur, Peggy A
Allred, Jacob B
Creagan, Edward T
Ingle, James N
Gastineau, Dennis A
Vuk-Pavlovic, Stanimir
author_sort Markovic, Svetomir N
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: Dendritic cells (DCs) have been used as vaccines in clinical trials of immunotherapy of cancer and other diseases. Nonetheless, progress towards the use of DCs in the clinic has been slow due in part to the absence of standard methods for DC preparation and exposure to disease-associated antigens. Because different ex vivo exposure methods can affect DC phenotype and function differently, we studied whether electroporation-mediated transfection (electrotransfection) of myeloid DCs with in vitro expanded RNA isolated from tumor tissue might be feasible as a standard physical method in the preparation of clinical-grade DC vaccines. METHODS: We prepared immature DCs (IDCs) from CD14(+ )cells isolated from leukapheresis products and extracted total RNA from freshly resected melanoma tissue. We reversely transcribed the RNA while attaching a T7 promoter to the products that we subsequently amplified by PCR. We transcribed the amplified cDNA in vitro and introduced the expanded RNA into IDCs by electroporation followed by DC maturation and cryopreservation. Isolated and expanded mRNA was analyzed for the presence of melanoma-associated tumor antigens gp100, tyrosinase or MART1. To test product safety, we injected five million DCs subcutaneously at three-week intervals for up to four injections into six patients suffering from stage IV malignant melanoma. RESULTS: Three preparations contained all three transcripts, one isolate contained tyrosinase and gp100 and one contained none. Electrotransfection of DCs did not affect viability and phenotype of fresh mature DCs. However, post-thaw viability was lower (69 ± 12 percent) in comparison to non-electroporated cells (82 ± 12 percent; p = 0.001). No patient exhibited grade 3 or 4 toxicity upon DC injections. CONCLUSION: Standardized preparation of viable clinical-grade DCs transfected with tumor-derived and in vitro amplified mRNA is feasible and their administration is safe.
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spelling pubmed-15701432006-09-19 Preparing clinical-grade myeloid dendritic cells by electroporation-mediated transfection of in vitro amplified tumor-derived mRNA and safety testing in stage IV malignant melanoma Markovic, Svetomir N Dietz, Allan B Greiner, Carl W Maas, Mary L Butler, Greg W Padley, Douglas J Bulur, Peggy A Allred, Jacob B Creagan, Edward T Ingle, James N Gastineau, Dennis A Vuk-Pavlovic, Stanimir J Transl Med Methodology BACKGROUND: Dendritic cells (DCs) have been used as vaccines in clinical trials of immunotherapy of cancer and other diseases. Nonetheless, progress towards the use of DCs in the clinic has been slow due in part to the absence of standard methods for DC preparation and exposure to disease-associated antigens. Because different ex vivo exposure methods can affect DC phenotype and function differently, we studied whether electroporation-mediated transfection (electrotransfection) of myeloid DCs with in vitro expanded RNA isolated from tumor tissue might be feasible as a standard physical method in the preparation of clinical-grade DC vaccines. METHODS: We prepared immature DCs (IDCs) from CD14(+ )cells isolated from leukapheresis products and extracted total RNA from freshly resected melanoma tissue. We reversely transcribed the RNA while attaching a T7 promoter to the products that we subsequently amplified by PCR. We transcribed the amplified cDNA in vitro and introduced the expanded RNA into IDCs by electroporation followed by DC maturation and cryopreservation. Isolated and expanded mRNA was analyzed for the presence of melanoma-associated tumor antigens gp100, tyrosinase or MART1. To test product safety, we injected five million DCs subcutaneously at three-week intervals for up to four injections into six patients suffering from stage IV malignant melanoma. RESULTS: Three preparations contained all three transcripts, one isolate contained tyrosinase and gp100 and one contained none. Electrotransfection of DCs did not affect viability and phenotype of fresh mature DCs. However, post-thaw viability was lower (69 ± 12 percent) in comparison to non-electroporated cells (82 ± 12 percent; p = 0.001). No patient exhibited grade 3 or 4 toxicity upon DC injections. CONCLUSION: Standardized preparation of viable clinical-grade DCs transfected with tumor-derived and in vitro amplified mRNA is feasible and their administration is safe. BioMed Central 2006-08-15 /pmc/articles/PMC1570143/ /pubmed/16911798 http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1479-5876-4-35 Text en Copyright © 2006 Markovic et al; licensee BioMed Central Ltd. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0 This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License ( (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0) ), which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
spellingShingle Methodology
Markovic, Svetomir N
Dietz, Allan B
Greiner, Carl W
Maas, Mary L
Butler, Greg W
Padley, Douglas J
Bulur, Peggy A
Allred, Jacob B
Creagan, Edward T
Ingle, James N
Gastineau, Dennis A
Vuk-Pavlovic, Stanimir
Preparing clinical-grade myeloid dendritic cells by electroporation-mediated transfection of in vitro amplified tumor-derived mRNA and safety testing in stage IV malignant melanoma
title Preparing clinical-grade myeloid dendritic cells by electroporation-mediated transfection of in vitro amplified tumor-derived mRNA and safety testing in stage IV malignant melanoma
title_full Preparing clinical-grade myeloid dendritic cells by electroporation-mediated transfection of in vitro amplified tumor-derived mRNA and safety testing in stage IV malignant melanoma
title_fullStr Preparing clinical-grade myeloid dendritic cells by electroporation-mediated transfection of in vitro amplified tumor-derived mRNA and safety testing in stage IV malignant melanoma
title_full_unstemmed Preparing clinical-grade myeloid dendritic cells by electroporation-mediated transfection of in vitro amplified tumor-derived mRNA and safety testing in stage IV malignant melanoma
title_short Preparing clinical-grade myeloid dendritic cells by electroporation-mediated transfection of in vitro amplified tumor-derived mRNA and safety testing in stage IV malignant melanoma
title_sort preparing clinical-grade myeloid dendritic cells by electroporation-mediated transfection of in vitro amplified tumor-derived mrna and safety testing in stage iv malignant melanoma
topic Methodology
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC1570143/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/16911798
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1479-5876-4-35
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