scholarly journals Requirement of Innate Immunity in Tumor-Bearing Mice Cured by Adoptive Immunotherapy Using Tumor-Draining Lymph Nodes

2015 ◽  
Vol 2015 ◽  
pp. 1-8
Author(s):  
John Ammori ◽  
Khaled Hamzeh ◽  
Hallie Graor ◽  
Julian Kim

Background.The purpose of this study was to determine the cellular effectors of both the adoptively transferred cells and the tumor-bearing host that participate in the antitumor response to adoptive immunotherapy using culture-activated tumor-draining lymph nodes (TDLNs).Methods.TDLNs harvested from mice with 4T1 carcinoma cells were fractionated to derive the L-selectinlowsubpopulation and activatedex vivoprior toin vitrocytokine release assays and adoptive transfer into BALB/c mice bearing 3-day established subcutaneous tumors. Tumor-bearing recipients were SCID (lacking T, B, and NK cells), Rag2 deficient (lacking T and B cells), and wild-type BALB/c mice.Results.Culture-activated L-selectinlow4T1 TDLN from BALB/c mice secreted significant levels of interferon-gamma in response to 4T1 but not control tumor cellsin vitro. CD4 cells within the adoptively transferred effector cell population contributed significantly to the antitumor effectin vivo. Culture-activated L-selectinlowTDLNs from BALB/c wild-type mice were able to cure Rag2 deficient but not SCID mice bearing 4T1 subcutaneous tumors, suggesting a requirement of NK cells within the innate immune system of the tumor-bearing host during the antitumor response.Conclusions.These results identify the cellular effectors involved in tumor regression following adoptive transfer and demonstrate the requirement for intact innate immunity within the tumor-bearing host.

2007 ◽  
Vol 204 (12) ◽  
pp. 2865-2874 ◽  
Author(s):  
Miyako Nagamachi ◽  
Daiji Sakata ◽  
Kenji Kabashima ◽  
Tomoyuki Furuyashiki ◽  
Takahiko Murata ◽  
...  

Prostaglandin E2 (PGE2) exerts its actions via four subtypes of the PGE receptor, EP1–4. We show that mice deficient in EP1 exhibited significantly attenuated Th1 response in contact hypersensitivity induced by dinitrofluorobenzene (DNFB). This phenotype was recapitulated in wild-type mice by administration of an EP1-selective antagonist during the sensitization phase, and by adoptive transfer of T cells from sensitized EP1−/− mice. Conversely, an EP1-selective agonist facilitated Th1 differentiation of naive T cells in vitro. Finally, CD11c+ cells containing the inducible form of PGE synthase increased in number in the draining lymph nodes after DNFB application. These results suggest that PGE2 produced by dendritic cells in the lymph nodes acts on EP1 in naive T cells to promote Th1 differentiation.


Blood ◽  
2011 ◽  
Vol 117 (4) ◽  
pp. 1196-1204 ◽  
Author(s):  
Céline Beauvillain ◽  
Pierre Cunin ◽  
Andrea Doni ◽  
Mari Scotet ◽  
Sébastien Jaillon ◽  
...  

Abstract Increasing evidence suggests that neutrophils may participate in the regulation of adaptive immune responses, and can reach draining lymph nodes and cross-prime naive T cells. The aim of this study was to identify the mechanism(s) involved in the migration of neutrophils to the draining lymph nodes. We demonstrate that a subpopulation of human and mouse neutrophils express CCR7. CCR7 is rapidly expressed at the membrane upon stimulation. In vitro, stimulated human neutrophils migrate in response to the CCR7 ligands CCL19 and CCL21. In vivo, injection of complete Freund adjuvant induces a rapid recruitment of neutrophils to the lymph nodes in wild-type mice but not in Ccr7−/− mice. Moreover, intradermally injected interleukin-17–and granulocyte-macrophage colony-stimulating factor–stimulated neutrophils from wild-type mice, but not from Ccr7−/− mice, migrate to the draining lymph nodes. These results identify CCR7 as a chemokine receptor involved in the migration of neutrophils to the lymph nodes.


1969 ◽  
Vol 129 (5) ◽  
pp. 1029-1044 ◽  
Author(s):  
Cesare Bosman ◽  
Joseph D. Feldman ◽  
Edgar Pick

Cell suspensions from draining lymph nodes of immune and nonimmune rats were reacted in vitro with 125I-labeled antigens. In light microscopic radioautographs of smears, 17% of the immunized cells were tagged by specific antigen; 2.0% of control cells were positive. In electron microscopic radioautographs, 90% of the labeled elements from immune donors were lymphocytes, blast and plasma cells; 10% were monocytes-macrophages or other elements, including naked nuclei. 15% of the labeled cells from control materials were lymphocytes and plasma cells, while 85% were monocytes-macrophages and naked nuclei. Within cell suspensions derived from immunized animals there were almost twice as many lymphocytes marked by isotope as plasma cells, and the lymphocytes ranged in morphology from mature monoribosomal elements to immature polyribosomal cells. Antibody-forming cells fixed labeled antigen at their surfaces. The monocyte-macrophage class was distinguished by a high mean grain count and by distribution of grains within cytoplasmic vacuoles and lysosomes.


2021 ◽  
Vol 9 (Suppl 3) ◽  
pp. A679-A679
Author(s):  
Ying Zheng ◽  
Andriana Lebid ◽  
Andrew Pardoll ◽  
Juan Fu ◽  
Chirag Patel ◽  
...  

BackgroundActivins, members of the transforming growth factor-ß (TGF-ß) superfamily, were isolated and identified in endocrine system, and have been widely studied in endocrine-related cancers,1 2 but not substantially in the context of immune system and endocrine-unrelated cancers.3–5 It has been reported that upon binding to the receptors, activins cause the intracellular recruitment and phosphorylation of smad proteins, which mediate the expression of Foxp3.6–9 Therefore, we hypothesized that the blockade of the interaction of activins and their receptors will inhibit the activins-mediated Foxp3 induction in CD4+ T cells, thus modify the immune suppressive tumor microenvironment and achieve the goal of cancer immunotherapy.MethodsELISA (enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay) has been performed to determine the plasma level of Activin A in tumor-bearing mice and cancer patients. In vitro iTreg (induced regulatory T cells) differentiation has been done to naïve CD4+ cells isolated from wild type mice in the presence or absence of Activin A, and the percentage of Foxp3+ cells was demonstrated by flow cytometric analysis. qRT-PCR analysis has been conducted to determine the mRNA level of activin receptor isotypes in the immune subpopulations sorted from Foxp3-YFP mice. In the end, in vivo subcutaneous transplanted tumor studies have been done to evaluate the anti-tumor therapeutic effects of activin-receptor 1c blockade.ResultsWe show here that tumor-bearing mice had elevated Activin A levels, which correlated directly with tumor burden. Likewise, cancer patients had elevated plasma Activin A compared to healthy controls. Importantly, our in vitro studies suggested that Activin A promoted differentiation of conventional CD4+ cells into Foxp3-expressing induced Tregs, especially when TGF-ß was limited. Database and qRT-PCR analysis of sorted major immune cell subsets in mice revealed that activin receptor 1C (Acvr1c) was uniquely expressed on Tregs and was highly upregulated during iTreg differentiation. Mice deficient in Acvr1c were more resistant to cancer progression compared to wild type mice. This phenotype correlated with reduced expression of the FoxP3 transcription factor in CD4+ cells. Similar phenomena were observed when we treated the mice with anti-Acvr1c antibody after tumor inoculation. This anti-tumor therapeutic effect was more significant when anti-Acvr1c antibody was administrated in combination with anti-PD-1 antibody.ConclusionsBlocking Activin A signaling through its receptor 1c is a promising and disease-specific strategy for preventing the accumulation of immunosuppressive iTregs in cancer. Hence it represents a potential candidate for cancer immunotherapy.AcknowledgementsThis research is supported by the Bloomberg-Kimmel Institute (Immunometabolism Program & Immune Modulation Program), the Melanoma Research Alliance, the NIH (RO1AI099300, RO1AI089830, and R01AI137046), and The DoD (PC130767).ReferencesRisbridger GP, Schmitt JF, Robertson DM. Activins and inhibins in endocrine and other tumors. Endocr Rev 2001;22(6):836–858.Cui X, et al. Perspectives of small molecule inhibitors of activin receptor-like kinase in anti-tumor treatment and stem cell differentiation (Review). Mol Med Rep 2019;19(6):5053–5062.Michael IP, et al. ALK7 signaling manifests a homeostatic tissue barrier that is abrogated during tumorigenesis and metastasis. Dev Cell 2019;49(3):409–424.Wu B, et al. The TGF-ß superfamily cytokine Activin-A is induced during autoimmune neuroinflammation and drives pathogenic Th17 cell differentiation. Immunity 2021;54(2):308–323.Antsiferova M, et al. Activin promotes skin carcinogenesis by attraction and reprogramming of macrophages. MBO Mol Med 2017;9(1):27–45.Tsuchida K, et al. Activin isoforms signal through type I receptor serine/threonine kinase ALK7. Mol Cell Endocrinol 2004;220(1–2):59–65.Khalil AM, et al. Differential binding activity of TGF-ß family proteins to select TGF-ß receptors. J Pharmacol Exp Ther 2016;358(3):423–430.Huber S, et al. Activin a promotes the TGF-beta-induced conversion of CD4+CD25- T cells into Foxp3+ induced regulatory T cells. J Immunol 2009;182(8):4633–4640.Iizuka-Koga M, et al. Induction and maintenance of regulatory T cells by transcription factors and epigenetic modifications. J Autoimmun 2017;83:113–121.Ethics ApprovalAll animal experiments were performed under protocols approved by the Johns Hopkins University Institutional Animal Care and Use Committee (IACUC).


2014 ◽  
Vol 211 (8) ◽  
pp. 1657-1672 ◽  
Author(s):  
Derek K. Chu ◽  
Rodrigo Jimenez-Saiz ◽  
Christopher P. Verschoor ◽  
Tina D. Walker ◽  
Susanna Goncharova ◽  
...  

Eosinophils natively inhabit the small intestine, but a functional role for them there has remained elusive. Here, we show that eosinophil-deficient mice were protected from induction of Th2-mediated peanut food allergy and anaphylaxis, and Th2 priming was restored by reconstitution with il4+/+ or il4−/− eosinophils. Eosinophils controlled CD103+ dendritic cell (DC) activation and migration from the intestine to draining lymph nodes, events necessary for Th2 priming. Eosinophil activation in vitro and in vivo led to degranulation of eosinophil peroxidase, a granule protein whose enzymatic activity promoted DC activation in mice and humans in vitro, and intestinal and extraintestinal mouse DC activation and mobilization to lymph nodes in vivo. Further, eosinophil peroxidase enhanced responses to ovalbumin seen after immunization. Thus, eosinophils can be critical contributors to the intestinal immune system, and granule-mediated shaping of DC responses can promote both intestinal and extraintestinal adaptive immunity.


Blood ◽  
2012 ◽  
Vol 120 (21) ◽  
pp. 3629-3629
Author(s):  
Vladimir Senyukov ◽  
William Kelton ◽  
Nishant Mehta ◽  
George Georgiou ◽  
Dean Lee

Abstract Abstract 3629 Acute myeloid leukemia (AML) is an aggressive malignancy for which current therapy fails to provide durable remission in approximately half of cases. Natural killer (NK) cells, as a key component of innate immunity, have recently shown clinical potential for adoptive immunotherapy against AML, particular when the donor and recipient are KIR mismatched. In addition to patients who do not have a suitable related donor, approximately 30% of patients bear all three families of KIR ligands and therefor cannot benefit from KIR mismatch. Thus, finding a related donor with predicted KIR mismatch is a major obstacle for adoptive NK cell immunotherapy. The majority of peripheral blood NK cells express CD16a (FcγRIIIa), which is the most potent receptor among the activating receptors that NK cells posses. NK cells express CD16a in association with disulflde-linked homo- or hetero-dimers of FcRγ or CD3ζ. Clustering of CD16a initiated by binding to the Fc-portion of IgG1 or IgG3 that opsonize target cells induces signals strong enough to overcome KIR inhibition. Thus, combining NK cell adoptive immunotherapy with Abs against tumor antigens could help overcome the limitations of KIR mismatching. Indeed, many promising anticancer Abs have failed in clinical trials because of insufficient efficacy, which, at least in part, may result from low affinity CD16a binding. Indeed, it was shown that the affinity between Fc and FcγRs correlates with cytotoxicity in cell-based assays and that the Abs with optimized FcγR affinity induced strong cytotoxicity against targeted tumor cells. CD33 is expressed on the blast cells of most cases of AML and represents a suitable antigen for antibody-based therapies. Lintuzumab, an unconjugated, humanized anti-CD33 mAb (HuM195), failed to improve patient outcomes in two randomized trials when combined with conventional chemotherapy. Gemtuzumab ozogamicin, an anti-CD33 mAb conjugated to the calicheamicin, in combination with chemotherapy, improved survival in a subset of AML patients, but has been withdrawn from US market by safety concerns. We optimized the FcγR affinity of HuM195 mAb (mNuM195) by cloning into pMaz-IgH Herceptin recipient vector containing S239D, A330L, I332E mutations that, as previously shown, leads to significant improvement of IgG1 binding to CD16a. To generate control wild type variant (wHuM195) we cloned the variable domains of HuM195 into pMaz-IgH Herceptin. Plasmids were transfected into HEK293F, and Abs were purified from cell culture supernatant with protein A resin, eluted with glycine HCL, and then the samples were buffer exchanged into PBS pH 7.4 for long-term storage. This S239D-A330L-I332E triple mutation in Fc portion of IgG1 did not affect antigen-biding affinity for CD33 target protein but showed more than 14-fold higher binding to CD16a than the wild type variant. The mHuM195 Abs increased cytotoxic activity of expanded human NK cells in Calcein AM-release assay when used in concentration as low as 0.01 μg/ml to pretreat murine thymoma EL-4 cells gene-modified to express human CD33 (ADCC, Mean±SD: 38.7±2.25% vs 11.7±3.49% for optimized vs wild type HuM195, and 5±3.15% without Abs, E:T ratio 2:1). We obtained the similar results when using K562 as targets, which naturally express CD33. K562 cells pretreated with mHuM195 Abs induced degranulation in 34±5.25% of NK cells where wHuM195 did so only in 17±4.6% of NK cells. Thus, optimization of HuM195 Ab to improve CD16a affinity results in dramatic increases NK cell cytotoxic activity. Disclosures: No relevant conflicts of interest to declare.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
◽  
Sabine Kuhn

<p><b>The anti-tumour immune response is often not potent enough to prevent or eradicate disease. Dendritic cells (DCs) are professional antigen-presenting cells that are critical for the initiation of immune responses. While DCs frequently infiltrate tumours, lack of activation together with immuno-suppressive factors from the tumour can hamper an effective anti-tumour immune response.</b></p> <p>In this thesis, the ability of microbial stimuli and danger signals to overcome suppression and re-programme DCs and macrophages to an immuno-stimulatory phenotype was investigated. Whole live Mycobacterium smegmatis and BCG were used to provide multiple pathogen-associated molecular patterns. The intracellularly-recognised toll-like-receptor (TLR) ligands CpG and Poly IC, as well as the extracelullarly recognised TLR ligand LPS, and the danger signal monosodium-urate crystals (MSU) were also included.</p> <p>Bone-marrow derived DCs were found to respond to all adjuvants in vitro and DCs in tumour cell suspensions could be activated ex vivo. To assess the ability of adjuvants to enhance anti-tumour responses in vivo, immune-competent mice bearing established subcutaneous B16F1 melanomas were injected peri-tumorally with the different adjuvants. In line with previous reports, CpG treatment was effective in delaying tumour growth and increasing survival. A similar effect was found with Poly IC, but not with LPS, M. smegmatis, BCG or MSU alone. Combination of M. smegmatis + MSU, however, significantly delayed tumour growth and prolonged survival, while combinations of MSU + BCG or LPS were ineffective. Similar results were obtained using the B16.OVA melanoma and E.G7-OVA thymoma subcutaneous tumour models. In addition, Poly IC and MSU + M. smegmatis reduced primary tumour growth as well as lung metastases in the orthotopic 4T1 breast carcinoma model.</p> <p>Both Poly IC and MSU + M. smegmatis elicited an anti-tumour immune response that required CD8 T cells as well as NK cells. These treatments also resulted in increased proliferation of CD8 T cells and NK cells in tumour-draining lymph nodes, augmented infiltration of effector cells into the tumour, as well as enhanced production of in ammatory cytokines by effector cells and DCs in tumours. In addition, MSU + M. smegmatis also stimulated CD4 T cell proliferation, tumour-infiltrationand activation, while at the same time decreasing the frequency of regulatory T cells in tumours.</p> <p>Activation of a successful immune response to tumours was associated with early induction of IL-12 and IFNʸ, as well as moderate levels of pro-inflammatory cytokines at the tumour site and systemically. Furthermore, anti-tumour activity correlated with the induction of inflammatory monocyte-derived DCs in tumour-draining lymph nodes. These DCs were also observed in adjuvant treated tumours and their appearance was preceded by accumulation of inflammatory monocytes at the tumour site.</p> <p>These findings suggest that specific natural adjuvants can successfully modify the tumour environment and enhance the innate and adaptive anti-tumour immune response to delay tumour progression and increase survival.</p>


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