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Adjuvant effect of anti-4-1BB mAb administration in adoptive T cell therapy of cancer

Administration of anti-4-1BB mAb has been found to be a potent adjuvant when combined with other therapeutic approaches, e.g. chemotherapy, cytokine therapies, anti-OX40 therapy, and peptide or DC vaccines. However, the adjuvant effect of anti-4-1BB mAb administration in adoptive T cell therapy of c...

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Autores principales: Li, Qiao, Iuchi, Takekazu, Jure-Kunkel, Maria N., Chang, Alfred E.
Formato: Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Ivyspring International Publisher 2007
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2096735/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/18071585
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author Li, Qiao
Iuchi, Takekazu
Jure-Kunkel, Maria N.
Chang, Alfred E.
author_facet Li, Qiao
Iuchi, Takekazu
Jure-Kunkel, Maria N.
Chang, Alfred E.
author_sort Li, Qiao
collection PubMed
description Administration of anti-4-1BB mAb has been found to be a potent adjuvant when combined with other therapeutic approaches, e.g. chemotherapy, cytokine therapies, anti-OX40 therapy, and peptide or DC vaccines. However, the adjuvant effect of anti-4-1BB mAb administration in adoptive T cell therapy of cancer has not been fully evaluated. In this report, effector T cells were generated in vitro by anti-CD3/anti-CD28 activation of tumor-draining lymph node (TDLN) cells and used in an adoptive immunotherapy model. While T cells or anti-4-1BB alone showed no therapeutic efficacy in mice bearing macroscopic 10-day pulmonary metastases, T cells plus anti-4-1BB mediated significant tumor regression in an anti-4-1BB dose dependent manner. Mice bearing microscopic 3-day lung metastases treated with T cells alone demonstrated tumor regression which was significantly enhanced by anti-4-1BB administration. NK cell depletion abrogated the augmented therapeutic efficacy rendered by anti-4-1BB. Cell transfer between congenic hosts demonstrated that anti-4-1BB administration increased the survival of adoptively transferred TDLN cells. Using STAT4(-/-) mice, we found that modulated IFNγ secretion in wt TDLN cells after anti-CD3/CD28/4-1BB activation in vitro was lost in similarly stimulated STAT4(-/-) TDLN cells. Additionally, anti-4-1BB administration failed to augment the therapeutic efficacy of T cell therapy in STAT4(-/-) mice. Together, these results indicate that administered anti-4-1BB mAb can serve as an effective adjuvant to augment the antitumor reactivity of adoptively transferred T cells by recruiting the host NK cells; increasing the persistence of infused effector T cells, and modulating the STAT4 molecular signaling pathway.
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spelling pubmed-20967352007-12-10 Adjuvant effect of anti-4-1BB mAb administration in adoptive T cell therapy of cancer Li, Qiao Iuchi, Takekazu Jure-Kunkel, Maria N. Chang, Alfred E. Int J Biol Sci Research Paper Administration of anti-4-1BB mAb has been found to be a potent adjuvant when combined with other therapeutic approaches, e.g. chemotherapy, cytokine therapies, anti-OX40 therapy, and peptide or DC vaccines. However, the adjuvant effect of anti-4-1BB mAb administration in adoptive T cell therapy of cancer has not been fully evaluated. In this report, effector T cells were generated in vitro by anti-CD3/anti-CD28 activation of tumor-draining lymph node (TDLN) cells and used in an adoptive immunotherapy model. While T cells or anti-4-1BB alone showed no therapeutic efficacy in mice bearing macroscopic 10-day pulmonary metastases, T cells plus anti-4-1BB mediated significant tumor regression in an anti-4-1BB dose dependent manner. Mice bearing microscopic 3-day lung metastases treated with T cells alone demonstrated tumor regression which was significantly enhanced by anti-4-1BB administration. NK cell depletion abrogated the augmented therapeutic efficacy rendered by anti-4-1BB. Cell transfer between congenic hosts demonstrated that anti-4-1BB administration increased the survival of adoptively transferred TDLN cells. Using STAT4(-/-) mice, we found that modulated IFNγ secretion in wt TDLN cells after anti-CD3/CD28/4-1BB activation in vitro was lost in similarly stimulated STAT4(-/-) TDLN cells. Additionally, anti-4-1BB administration failed to augment the therapeutic efficacy of T cell therapy in STAT4(-/-) mice. Together, these results indicate that administered anti-4-1BB mAb can serve as an effective adjuvant to augment the antitumor reactivity of adoptively transferred T cells by recruiting the host NK cells; increasing the persistence of infused effector T cells, and modulating the STAT4 molecular signaling pathway. Ivyspring International Publisher 2007-11-20 /pmc/articles/PMC2096735/ /pubmed/18071585 Text en © Ivyspring International Publisher. This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/3.0/). Reproduction is permitted for personal, noncommercial use, provided that the article is in whole, unmodified, and properly cited.
spellingShingle Research Paper
Li, Qiao
Iuchi, Takekazu
Jure-Kunkel, Maria N.
Chang, Alfred E.
Adjuvant effect of anti-4-1BB mAb administration in adoptive T cell therapy of cancer
title Adjuvant effect of anti-4-1BB mAb administration in adoptive T cell therapy of cancer
title_full Adjuvant effect of anti-4-1BB mAb administration in adoptive T cell therapy of cancer
title_fullStr Adjuvant effect of anti-4-1BB mAb administration in adoptive T cell therapy of cancer
title_full_unstemmed Adjuvant effect of anti-4-1BB mAb administration in adoptive T cell therapy of cancer
title_short Adjuvant effect of anti-4-1BB mAb administration in adoptive T cell therapy of cancer
title_sort adjuvant effect of anti-4-1bb mab administration in adoptive t cell therapy of cancer
topic Research Paper
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2096735/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/18071585
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