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CUTTING EDGE |
Surgery Branch, National Cancer Institute, Bethesda, MD 20892
| Abstract |
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| Introduction |
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-galactosidase
(
-gal)2 from
Escherichia coli (6).
CD8+ T cells have long been thought to play a
central role as immune effectors in the tumor setting. However, while
LacZ-transfected tumor cell lines can be recognized by
-gal-specific CD8+ T cells, they do not elicit
-gal-specific CD8+ T cells. Why is this the
case?
-Gal is large (1023 aa) and contains many potential
immunogenic epitopes. Ag-specific cytolytic responses are efficiently
elicited after immunization of mice with a variety of different
recombinant viruses encoding LacZ (7).
CD4+ T cells may serve to control the activation
and persistence of the CD8+ T cell response,
because they play a major role in the induction of autoimmune disease
and in the orchestration of anti-viral immunity
(8, 9, 10, 11). CD8+ T cells specific for
viral Ags have been found to be inhibited under conditions in which
CD4+ T cell help was lacking (12).
To explore the impact of CD4+ T cells on
Ag-specific CD8+ T cells in the tumor setting, we
generated a
-gal-specific, IL-2-secreting, Th1-type
CD4+ T cell clone, B12, and used a
LacZ-transduced tumor, WP4.
-gal, as a target. Using this
experimental system, we address the question: What are the effects of
Ag-specific CD4+ T cells on the function of
endogenous, Ag-specific CD8+ T cells?
| Materials and Methods |
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C57BL/6 mice (National Cancer Institute, Frederick, MD) were
immunized with a vaccinia virus expressing
-gal (13).
Three weeks later, spleens were harvested and
CD4+ cells were isolated by passage over a
negative selection column (R&D Systems, Minneapolis, MN).
CD4+ T cells were plated at 8 x
105 cells/well in 24-well plates in complete
media (6). Irradiated syngeneic splenocytes pulsed with
100 µg/ml of
-gal protein (Sigma, St. Louis, MO) were added at
2 x 106 cells/well every 2 wk. Recombinant
IL-2 (Chiron, Emeryville, CA) was added on day 3 of culture at 5 CU/ml.
Reactivity after limiting dilution cloning was assessed by incubation
of 2 x 105 CD4+ T
cells with 2 x 105 splenocytes pulsed with
100 µg/ml
-gal protein. Supernatants were evaluated for the
presence of IL-4 and IL-2 by ELISA (Endogen, Woburn, MA). Control
CD4+ T cell clones were similarly generated from
mice immunized with OVA protein (Sigma) in IFA. FACS analysis was
performed on the T cell clone using anti-CD4 (L3T4) and
anti-CD8 (Ly-2) Abs (PharMingen, San Diego, CA). Stained cells were
analyzed on a FACScan (Becton Dickinson, Mountain View, CA).
For Ab blocking experiments, 105 effectors were
incubated with 1 x 105 splenocytes in the
presence of 20 µg/ml of Abs specific for I-Ab
(M5/114.15.2), CD4 (L3T4), or MHC class I (28-8-6) (PharMingen). After
30 min, 100 µg/ml of OVA or
-gal protein was added. Supernatants
were assayed for the presence of IL-2 by ELISA (Endogen).
Tumors
The weakly immunogenic, methylcholanthrene-induced MCA-205
fibrosarcoma and a clone of this line, WP4.WT, have been described
previously (14). WP4.WT was retrovirally transduced with
an LSXN-based retrovirus encoding the LacZ gene driven by a
long terminal repeat to produce the WP4.
-gal line, which was cloned
by limiting dilution and selected for high expression of
-gal as
assessed by 5-bromo-4-chloro-3 indoyl
-D-galactoside
(X-Gal) staining.
In vivo experiments
A total of 5 x 105 tumor cells were
injected i.v., and CD4+ T cells were transferred
i.v. 3 days later. Mice were sacrificed on day 1416 after tumor
injection, lungs were removed and stained with india ink, and lung
nodules were counted in a blinded fashion. In Ab-depletion experiments,
mice were given the mAb 2.43 as described (2). Depletion
was confirmed by FACS analysis. Class II knockout (KO) and
2-microglobulin (
2m)
KO mice (C57BL/6TacfBR-[KO]A
bN5 and
C57BL/6GphTacfBR[KO]
2mN5) and their
respective controls are on a B6 background and were obtained from
Taconic (Germantown, NY).
To generate CD8+ cultures, mice were
inoculated with tumor cells then treated with 3 x
105 CD4+ T cells 3 days
later. Fifteen days later, splenocytes were harvested then incubated in
upright T25 flasks (two spleens pooled per three flasks) in 20 ml of
culture medium with 1 µM peptide for 6 days. The
-gal96103 peptide used was DAPIYTNV
(15). Irrelevant peptides varied between experiments and
included NP366374 (ASNENMETM),
hgp1002533 (KVPRNQDWL), or
mgp1002533 (EGSRNQDWL). IFN-
release was
measured in supernatants after overnight incubation of 2 x
105 cells with 1 µM peptide added directly to
the culture well.
| Results and Discussion |
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-gal as a model
Ag
To study the effects of Ag-specific CD4+ T
cells on the function of endogenous, Ag-specific
CD8+ T cells, we generated a
-gal specific,
CD4+ T cell population from mice immunized with a
vaccinia virus containing the LacZ gene. After enrichment
for CD4+ T cells, splenocytes were restimulated
in vitro with
-gal protein. The
-gal-specific T cell line was
cloned by limiting dilution, yielding two types of specific clones:
those that secreted predominantly Th1-type cytokines, and those that
secreted predominantly Th2-type cytokines (Fig. 1
A).
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, but not IL-4 or IL-10, and grew
continuously for over 9 mo, allowing for further study. Ab-blocking
experiments showed that the
-gal reactivity was class II restricted
and CD4 dependent (Fig. 1
-gal-expressing tumor
target, we employed a LacZ-transfected WP4.
-gal subclone,
which was shown to be able to process and present Ags on its surface
because it could be recognized by Kb-restricted,
-gal-specific CD8+ T cells (not shown).
CD4+ T cell clone mediates regression of
-gal-expressing tumor in vivo: requirement for host MHC class I and
class II molecules
To evaluate if the B12
-gal-specific,
CD4+ T cell clone could mediate tumor
destruction, the WP4.
-gal tumor was injected i.v. and
allowed to establish for 3 days. Groups treated with the B12 clone had
significantly fewer pulmonary nodules than untreated controls at doses
as low as 1 x 105 cells in titering
experiments (data not shown). Treatment of WP4.
-gal with 3 x
105 B12 clone significantly reduced the average
number of lung nodules in repeated experiments (for example from 85 to
17 in Fig. 2
A or 174 to 6 in
Fig. 2
D). The presence of host CD8+
cells was required for this effect (Fig. 2
B). To determine
the specificity of the observed tumor treatment, the parental WP4.WT
was included in the same experiment. No therapy was observed in mice
bearing the parental tumor, indicating that tumor expression of
-gal
was required (Fig. 2
C). Adoptive transfer of a control
Th1-type CD4+ T cell clone specific for OVA had
no effect on the
-gal expressing tumor (not shown).
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-gal tumor cell lines stained
positive for MHC class I but negative for MHC class II (not shown),
even after treatment with IFN-
. In contrast, the expression of
I-Ab was up-regulated on the B16 melanoma control
cell line after incubation with IFN-
, as previously shown
(16).
CD4+ T cells are known to interact with MHC class
II-expressing host cells, especially dendritic cells (DC), altering
their ability to activate other components of the immune system. To
assess whether the presence of host MHC class I and MHC class II was
required for tumor eradication after adoptive transfer of the
CD4+ B12 clone, we performed experiments using
the WP4.
-gal tumor in KO mice with homozygous deficiencies in
2m (Fig. 2
E) or MHC class II
(Fig. 2
F). The B12 clone was therapeutically ineffective
against the WP4.
-gal tumor in both strains, indicating a requirement
for both MHC class I and MHC class II expression by host cells.
Antitumor effect of CD4+ T cells is through an indirect mechanism involving the recruitment of host Ag-specific CD8+ T cells
APC, such as DC, can cross-present shed
-gal tumor Ag in the
context of both MHC class I and class II molecules. The interaction of
a host APC with Ag-specific CD4+ T cells can make
it capable of stimulating naive, endogenous CD8+
cytotoxic T cells, which may then function as specific effector cells
capable of lysing tumor. CD8+ T cells were
important effector cells in our model because depletion of
CD8+ T cells in wild-type mice abrogated the
therapeutic effects of the CD4+ T cell clone
(Fig. 2
, A and B).
To directly assess the induction of Ag-specific host
CD8+ T cells, fresh splenocytes from
tumor-bearing mice that had been treated with the B12 clone were
cocultured with the Kb-restricted, immunodominant
1 epitope from
-gal (15). In three experiments,
potent
-gal-specific CD8+ T cell responses
were elicited (Fig. 3
A).
CD8+ T cells were generated only from mice
receiving the B12 helper clone that were then exposed to the
-gal
peptide, but not a control peptide, ex vivo. CD8+
T cell responses were not elicited in nontumor bearing mice whose
peptide-stimulated splenocytes exhibited a stimulation index of 0.9,
nor were any Ag-specific CD8+ T cells seen in
mice bearing the parental tumor.
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-gal bearing mice did
not induce
-gal-specific CD8+ T cells (Fig. 3
-gal nodules in mice treated with OVA-specific
CD4+ T cells. Finally, no specific
CD8+ T cells were induced after transfer of the
B12 clone to MHC class II KO mice (Fig. 3Implications for immune activation of anti-tumor CD8+ T cells
The data presented here point to an active cooperation between CD4+ and CD8+ T cells in the eradication of tumor cells. The adoptive transfer of CD4+ T cells has been reported to treat established tumor (17, 18, 19); however, CD4+ T cells in these systems were hypothesized to act through NK or macrophage effector cells or by direct lysis of a MHC class II-positive tumor. Ossendorp et al. have found that generation of specific CD4+ T cells through immunization with a helper epitope resulted in increased anti-tumor activity that is mediated by CD8+ effector cells, even when the tumor cells used are MHC class II negative (20). The present manuscript is the first in which the transfer of CD4+ T cells specific for a model tumor Ag have been found to elicit the de novo generation of CD8+ T cells specific for that same Ag.
CD8+ T cells have been widely reported to transfer tumor immunity and to treat established tumors upon adoptive transfer (21, 22). They are thought to work by directly destroying tumor cells in situ. In contrast, adoptive transfer of the CD4+ T cell clone described here activates endogenous CD8+ effector cells. The activation of specific CD8+ T cells by CD4+ T cells may be most efficient when cells recognize the same Ag presented by a DC, in the context of both MHC class I and class II molecules. Recognition of DC by CD4+ T cells can lead to IL-2-production resulting in proliferative effects on proximate CD8+ T cells. Perhaps more importantly, CD4+ T cells activate DC, enhancing their ability to stimulate naive CD8+ T cells (23, 24). DC "conditioning" is characterized, in part, by the up-regulation of CD80/CD86 and MHC class I and II levels and the production of IL-12 (25), a process mediated in large part by the interaction of CD40, expressed on the APC, and CD40 ligand, expressed on activated helper cells (26).
Thus, we propose that DC do not fully mature in the microenvironment of the tumor, where help is limiting and inflammatory signals are lacking. The striking ability of CD4+ T cells to treat established tumors in this model system suggests that these DC are then unable to activate naive CD8+ T cells, important mediators of tumor destruction. Provision of Ag-specific CD4+ T cells by adoptive transfer or by activation in vivo after vaccination may result in the de novo induction of CD8+ T cell function in patients with cancer.
| Acknowledgments |
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| Footnotes |
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2 Abbreviations used in this paper:
-gal,
-galactosidase; KO, knockout;
2m,
2-microglobulin; DC, dendritic cell. ![]()
Received for publication August 31, 1999. Accepted for publication November 12, 1999.
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