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Melanoma Cells Treated with GGTI and IFN-γ Allow Murine Vaccination and Enhance Cytotoxic Response against Human Melanoma Cells

BACKGROUND: Suboptimal activation of T lymphocytes by melanoma cells is often due to the defective expression of class I major histocompatibility antigens (MHC-I) and costimulatory molecules. We have previously shown that geranylgeranyl transferase inhibition (done with GGTI-298) stimulates anti-mel...

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Autores principales: Sarrabayrouse, Guillaume, Pich, Christine, Moriez, Raphaël, Armand-Labit, Virginie, Rochaix, Philippe, Favre, Gilles, Tilkin-Mariamé, Anne-Françoise
Formato: Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2010
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2815789/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/20140259
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0009043
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author Sarrabayrouse, Guillaume
Pich, Christine
Moriez, Raphaël
Armand-Labit, Virginie
Rochaix, Philippe
Favre, Gilles
Tilkin-Mariamé, Anne-Françoise
author_facet Sarrabayrouse, Guillaume
Pich, Christine
Moriez, Raphaël
Armand-Labit, Virginie
Rochaix, Philippe
Favre, Gilles
Tilkin-Mariamé, Anne-Françoise
author_sort Sarrabayrouse, Guillaume
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: Suboptimal activation of T lymphocytes by melanoma cells is often due to the defective expression of class I major histocompatibility antigens (MHC-I) and costimulatory molecules. We have previously shown that geranylgeranyl transferase inhibition (done with GGTI-298) stimulates anti-melanoma immune response through MHC-I and costimulatory molecule expression in the B16F10 murine model [1]. METHODOLOGY/PRINCIPAL FINDINGS: In this study, it is shown that vaccination with mIFN-gand GGTI-298 pretreated B16F10 cells induces a protection against untreated tumor growth and pulmonary metastases implantation. Furthermore, using a human melanoma model (LB1319-MEL), we demonstrated that in vitro treatment with hIFN-γ and GGTI-298 led to the up regulation of MHC-I and a costimulatory molecule CD86 and down regulation of an inhibitory molecule PD-1L. Co-culture experiments with peripheral blood mononuclear cells (PBMC) revealed that modifications induced by hIFN-γ and GGTI-298 on the selected melanoma cells, enables the stimulation of lymphocytes from HLA compatible healthy donors. Indeed, as compared with untreated melanoma cells, pretreatment with hIFN-γ and GGTI-298 together rendered the melanoma cells more efficient at inducing the: i) activation of CD8 T lymphocytes (CD8+/CD69+); ii) proliferation of tumor-specific CD8 T cells (MelanA-MART1/TCR+); iii) secretion of hIFN-γ; and iv) anti-melanoma specific cytotoxic cells. CONCLUSIONS/SIGNIFICANCE: These data indicate that pharmacological treatment of melanoma cell lines with IFN-γ and GGTI-298 stimulates their immunogenicity and could be a novel approach to produce tumor cells suitable for vaccination and for stimulation of anti-melanoma effector cells.
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spelling pubmed-28157892010-02-07 Melanoma Cells Treated with GGTI and IFN-γ Allow Murine Vaccination and Enhance Cytotoxic Response against Human Melanoma Cells Sarrabayrouse, Guillaume Pich, Christine Moriez, Raphaël Armand-Labit, Virginie Rochaix, Philippe Favre, Gilles Tilkin-Mariamé, Anne-Françoise PLoS One Research Article BACKGROUND: Suboptimal activation of T lymphocytes by melanoma cells is often due to the defective expression of class I major histocompatibility antigens (MHC-I) and costimulatory molecules. We have previously shown that geranylgeranyl transferase inhibition (done with GGTI-298) stimulates anti-melanoma immune response through MHC-I and costimulatory molecule expression in the B16F10 murine model [1]. METHODOLOGY/PRINCIPAL FINDINGS: In this study, it is shown that vaccination with mIFN-gand GGTI-298 pretreated B16F10 cells induces a protection against untreated tumor growth and pulmonary metastases implantation. Furthermore, using a human melanoma model (LB1319-MEL), we demonstrated that in vitro treatment with hIFN-γ and GGTI-298 led to the up regulation of MHC-I and a costimulatory molecule CD86 and down regulation of an inhibitory molecule PD-1L. Co-culture experiments with peripheral blood mononuclear cells (PBMC) revealed that modifications induced by hIFN-γ and GGTI-298 on the selected melanoma cells, enables the stimulation of lymphocytes from HLA compatible healthy donors. Indeed, as compared with untreated melanoma cells, pretreatment with hIFN-γ and GGTI-298 together rendered the melanoma cells more efficient at inducing the: i) activation of CD8 T lymphocytes (CD8+/CD69+); ii) proliferation of tumor-specific CD8 T cells (MelanA-MART1/TCR+); iii) secretion of hIFN-γ; and iv) anti-melanoma specific cytotoxic cells. CONCLUSIONS/SIGNIFICANCE: These data indicate that pharmacological treatment of melanoma cell lines with IFN-γ and GGTI-298 stimulates their immunogenicity and could be a novel approach to produce tumor cells suitable for vaccination and for stimulation of anti-melanoma effector cells. Public Library of Science 2010-02-03 /pmc/articles/PMC2815789/ /pubmed/20140259 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0009043 Text en Sarrabayrouse et al. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are properly credited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Sarrabayrouse, Guillaume
Pich, Christine
Moriez, Raphaël
Armand-Labit, Virginie
Rochaix, Philippe
Favre, Gilles
Tilkin-Mariamé, Anne-Françoise
Melanoma Cells Treated with GGTI and IFN-γ Allow Murine Vaccination and Enhance Cytotoxic Response against Human Melanoma Cells
title Melanoma Cells Treated with GGTI and IFN-γ Allow Murine Vaccination and Enhance Cytotoxic Response against Human Melanoma Cells
title_full Melanoma Cells Treated with GGTI and IFN-γ Allow Murine Vaccination and Enhance Cytotoxic Response against Human Melanoma Cells
title_fullStr Melanoma Cells Treated with GGTI and IFN-γ Allow Murine Vaccination and Enhance Cytotoxic Response against Human Melanoma Cells
title_full_unstemmed Melanoma Cells Treated with GGTI and IFN-γ Allow Murine Vaccination and Enhance Cytotoxic Response against Human Melanoma Cells
title_short Melanoma Cells Treated with GGTI and IFN-γ Allow Murine Vaccination and Enhance Cytotoxic Response against Human Melanoma Cells
title_sort melanoma cells treated with ggti and ifn-γ allow murine vaccination and enhance cytotoxic response against human melanoma cells
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2815789/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/20140259
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0009043
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