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CUTTING EDGE |
Cancer Immunology Program, Peter MacCallum Cancer Institute, East Melbourne, Victoria, Australia
| Abstract |
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| Introduction |
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| Materials and Methods |
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Inbred C57BL/6 (B6) mice were purchased from The Walter and Eliza Hall Institute of Medical Research, Melbourne, Australia. C57BL/6J (pfp-/-) mice (targeted in C57BL/6J embryonic stem cells and kindly provided by Dr. Kagi, Ref. 27), C57BL/6J granzyme A-deficient (B6 grzA-/-, Ref. 28), C57BL/6J granzyme B cluster-deficient (B6 grzB-/-, Ref. 15), and C57BL/6 recombination-activating gene (RAG)-1-deficient (B6 RAG-1-/-) mice were bred at the Peter MacCallum Cancer Institute (Victoria, Australia). Granzyme A and B cluster-deficient (B6 grzAB-/-) mice were created and bred at the Peter MacCallum Cancer Institute, and all mice used were genotyped using the PCR screening protocol previously described (29). All gene-targeted mice were derived from C57BL/6 embryonic stem cells or had been back-crossed over 10 generations to C57BL/6. Mice of 410 wk of age were used in all experiments that were performed according to animal experimental ethics committee guidelines.
Cell culture and reagents
The spontaneous B cell lymphomas, PN53H-1 and PNK-15, were derived from B6 pfp-/- mice as described (1, 11). The spontaneous B cell lymphomas
2µNPN-2 and
2µNPN-8 were similarly derived from B6.pfp-/-
2-microglobulin-deficient (
2µ-/-) mice (30) and are deficient for MHC class I and CD1d, but lack NKG2D ligands (S. E. A. Street, M. J. Smyth, and J. A. Trapani, unpublished data). Mock-infected mouse RMA (H-2b) mutant lymphoma (derived from the Raucher virus-induced murine cell line, RBL-5), RMA expressing retinoic acid early inducible (Rae)-1
(RMA-Rae-1
), 3LL Lewis lung carcinoma and B16F10 melanoma cells have been previously described (31, 32). All cells were grown in DMEM or RPMI 1640 medium supplemented with 10% (v/v) FCS, 2 mM glutamine, 100 U/ml penicillin, and 100 µg/ml streptomycin (Life Technologies, Grand Island, NY). Recombinant human IL-2 was a kind gift from Chiron (Emeryville, CA) and recombinant mouse IL-12 from the Genetics Institute (Cambridge, MA).
Tumor control in vivo
Three different experimental systems were employed. The B cell lymphomas, PN53H-1, PNK-15,
2µNPN-2, and
2µNPN-8 were transplanted directly from B6 pfp-/- RAG-1-/- mice into B6 WT mice or B6 mice gene-targeted for RAG-1, pfp, grzA and/or grzB. Groups of 5 B6 WT or B6 gene-targeted mice were injected i.p. with increasing numbers of lymphoma cells and observed daily for tumor growth for 150 days. Some groups of B6 WT mice were depleted of CD8+ T cells as previously described (1). Mice were sacrificed upon abdominal swelling and disseminated lymphoma development was confirmed. Groups of five untreated B6 WT or gene-targeted mice were injected s.c. with vector alone-infected or Rae-1
-infected RMA tumor cells (5 x 104 cells) in 0.2 ml PBS as indicated. Mice were observed every 2 days for tumor growth using a caliper square measuring along the perpendicular axes of the tumors (the product of two diameters ± SE) and sacrificed when tumors reached a size >12 mm diameter. Mice without any signs of tumor growth were kept under observation for at least 100 days. B16F10 melanoma cells or 3LL Lewis lung carcinoma cells were inoculated i.v. at a dose of 5 x 105 cells previously shown in groups of five WT or gene-targeted mice to result in similar numbers of lung metastases (31). Some groups of mice were treated with either recombinant IL-2 or with IL-12 as described (9, 33). Mice received IL-2, 100,000 U/200 µl PBS i.p. daily, on days 37 (where day 0 was the day of tumor inoculation) or 250 U IL-12 i.p. on days -5, -4, -3, -2, -1, 1, 2, 3, 4, and 5 (where day 0 was the day of i.v. tumor inoculation). Mice were sacrificed 14 days later, the lungs removed, and surface metastases counted with the aid of a dissecting microscope. In all metastasis models, the data were recorded as the mean number of metastases ± SEM. Significance was determined by a Mann-Whitney rank sum U test.
| Results and Discussion |
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Pfp-deficient mice spontaneously develop lymphomas of B cell origin (1, 11), and a number of these lymphomas have previously been characterized in vitro and in vivo following transplantation into WT or pfp-/- mice. Strikingly, these C57BL/6 pfp-/- mouse-derived lymphomas are avidly rejected by CD8+ T cells in WT mice even when as many as 107108 tumor cells are given, yet can still grow and kill pfp-/- mice at doses as low as 103 cells (1, 11). We transplanted two such MHC class I expressing B cell lymphomas independently into cohorts of WT, RAG-1-/-, grzA-/-, grzB-/-, grzAB-/-, and pfp-/- mice (all on a C57BL/6 background). Although as many as 107 lymphoma cells were rejected by WT, grzA-/-, grzB-/-, and grzAB-/-mice, pfp-/-, and RAG-1-/- and WT mice depleted of CD8+ cells succumbed to disseminated lymphoma at doses as low as 103 tumor cells (Fig. 1, a and b). This represents at least a 10,000-fold difference in sensitivity to these lymphomas between grzAB-/- and pfp-/- mice. In a similar manner the same strains of mice were inoculated with B cell lymphomas originally derived from B6 pfp-/-
2µ-/- mice (Fig. 1, c and d). These lymphomas lack MHC class I and are rejected in WT mice by NK cells (S. E. A. Street, M. J. Smyth, and J. A. Trapani, unpublished data). Although rejection was naturally mediated by a different subset of effector cells, again only pfp, but not grzA and grzB, was essential for tumor control. Collectively, these data illustrate that regardless of the effector cell, spontaneous B cell lymphomas are exquisitely sensitive to pfp-mediated control, even in the absence of grzA and the grzB clusters.
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. We have previously demonstrated that RMA-Rae-1
cells can be powerfully rejected in WT mice by NK and CD8+ T cells in a manner strictly dependent upon pfp (32). In concert with our previous lymphoma rejection data (Ref. 25 and Fig. 1), s.c. RMA-Rae-1
tumors were rejected in WT, grzA-/-, grzB-/-, and grzAB-/- mice, but not pfp-/- mice (Fig. 2a), whereas RMA control tumors grew equivalently in all strains of mice (Fig. 2b). Arguably, tumor rejection mediated by a natural immune response may not represent that delivered by highly activated effector cells and consequently we further examined the role of grzA and grzB in tumor rejection mediated by cytokine-activated effector cells. We have previously demonstrated that both IL-12 and high-dose IL-2 mediate rejection of B16F10 lung metastases in an NK cell- and pfp-dependent manner (9, 33). In this study we have confirmed the role of pfp and demonstrated that a lack of grzA or the B cluster granzymes does not affect the efficacy of these IL-2- or IL-12-dependent responses against B16F10 metastases (Fig. 3a) or the effect of IL-12 administration on 3LL Lewis lung metastases (Fig. 3b). This metastasis experiment with melanoma and lung carcinoma cells further confirms that tumor cells of many origins, including epithelial, melanomas, sarcomas, and lymphomas, and in multiple sites (lymphoid organs, lungs, i.p., and s.c.) appear to be rejected independently of grzA and grzB cluster proteases (25).
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| Conclusions |
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Our study does not eliminate the possibility that some tumor cells or normal cells might be particularly sensitive to grzA and grzB, however there are few, if any, examples in which tumor or virus-infected target cells have been shown to be resistant to effector cells specifically lacking grzA and grzB. The true role of grzA and grzB in pfp-mediated cell death remains an intriguing mystery, but one imagines viruses such as ectromelia and CMV will provide important clues. Despite contending that there are no convincing in vivo studies to date confirming a functional role for granzymes in cancer immune surveillance or rejection, there is no doubt that granzymes are essential for defense against a number of important viral pathogens (34). From an evolutionary viewpoint, there can be little doubt that the primary raison detre for granzymes is viral defense, and examples, such as the equivalent susceptibility of grzAB-/- and pfp-/- mice to the poxvirus ectromelia, support this idea (35). Recently, a human grzB polymorphism was reported to lead to defective apoptosis induction (36). This allele was surprisingly frequent in the populations studied, with up to 29% of individuals found to be heterozygous carriers of the mutation. This important revelation may soon permit an evaluation of whether grzB, at least, predisposes to defects in viral immunity and/or cancer susceptibility in humans.
| Acknowledgments |
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tumor cells. | Footnotes |
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2 Address correspondence and reprint requests to Dr. Mark J. Smyth, Cancer Immunology Program, Peter MacCallum Cancer Institute, Locked Bag 1, ABeckett Street, 8006 Victoria, Australia. E-mail address: m.smyth{at}pmci.unimelb.edu.au ![]()
3 Abbreviations used in this paper: pfp, perforin; grz, granzyme; RAE, retinoic acid early inducible; WT, wild-type;
2µ,
2-microglobulin; RAG, recombination-activating gene. ![]()
Received for publication April 10, 2003. Accepted for publication May 12, 2003.
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