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* Department of Immunology and Cell Biology, Istituto Ricerche Farmacologiche Mario Negri, Milan, Italy;
Department of Animal Pathology, Hygiene and Public Health, Faculty of Veterinary Medicine, University of Milan, Milan, Italy; and
Rheumatology Section, Division of Medicine, Imperial College School of Medicine, Hammersmith Campus, London, United Kingdom
| Abstract |
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| Introduction |
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Rituximab (Mabthera, Rituxan) is a chimeric unconjugated IgG1 mAb approved for the treatment of B-NHL and clinically active in both low grade and aggressive lymphomas (3, 4, 5, 6). Studies in vitro have shown that rituximab is very effective in inducing C-dependent cytotoxicity (CDC)3 against both freshly isolated lymphoma cells and cell lines (3, 7, 8, 9). Furthermore, C has been shown to be activated very rapidly by rituximab in vivo in patients (10) or in monkeys (11). Although less efficiently, rituximab also activates Ab-dependent cellular cytotoxicity (ADCC) in vitro (3, 8), and recent evidence showing a correlation between Fc
RIII polymorphisms and clinical response suggests a role for Fc
RIII-bearing cells such as NK cells and macrophages in the response (12). In addition, a recent model of human lymphoma in nude mice has suggested that the Fc
R
-chain, common to both Fc
RI and Fc
RIII, is required for the full therapeutic activity of the Ab (13). Other reports suggest a role for rituximab-induced apoptosis in the therapeutic activity of rituximab, but little evidence is available in vivo to support this hypothesis (14, 15, 16).
We have set up a nonimmunodeficient mouse model to study the mechanism of action of rituximab in vivo and show a crucial role for C activation.
| Materials and Methods |
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EL4 murine T lymphoma cells and YAC-1 murine lymphoma were cultured in RPMI 1640 medium (Seromed, Berlin, Germany) supplemented with 10% FCS (HyClone, Steril System, Logan, UT), 2 mM glutamine (Life Technologies, Paisley, Scotland), 50 µM 2-ME, and 100 IU/ml penicillin/streptomycin. EL4 cells were infected with the Moloney-derived long terminal repeat (LTR)-CD20-LTR vector containing the human CD20 cDNA, as described (17). CD20-positive cells were purified by sorting on a FACSorter (BD Biosciences, San Jose, CA). CD20 expression levels were measured using PE-labeled anti-CD20 mAb and Quantibrite beads (BD Biosciences).
Syngeneic lymphoma model
C57BL/6 mice (810 wk of age) were purchased from Charles River (Calco, Italy). We inoculated 8 x 103 EL4-CD20+ cells in 200 µl of saline by tail vein injection. In parallel groups of mice, 150 µg of rituximab (Roche Italia, Monza, Italy), murine anti-CD20 IgG2a Ab 1F5 (18), or control anti-human IL-2R
Ab daclizumab (Roche) in 300 µl of saline, or saline only was inoculated i.p. 24 h later. All procedures with animals were conducted in conformity with the institutional guidelines that are in compliance with national and international laws and policies.
In some experiments, groups of mice were repeatedly inoculated i.p. with anti-NK cell Ab TM-
1 recognizing the murine IL-2R
-chain or anti-GR1 Ab RB-8C5 specific for murine neutrophils, as described (19, 20). Treatment with either Ab started 2 days before tumor cell inoculation with a 300 µg dose, followed by administrations of 200 µg doses every 4 days until day 30 (19, 20). That the Abs used effectively depleted NK and polymorphonuclear cells (PMN), respectively, was verified by treating control syngeneic mice with 300 µg Ab and measuring NK activity against the YAC-1 cell line (19) or by manual counts of peripheral blood PMN after May-Grünwald-Giemsa staining, as described (20), 2 days after Ab treatment.
The C1qa-/- knockout mice in the C57BL/6 background have been described previously (21). They were bred at Charles River and used at 810 wk of age like their wild-type counterparts. In some experiments, nude mice (CD1 nu/nu; 810 wk old; Charles River) were used. Experimental conditions were the same as for the C57BL/6 mice, except that mice were irradiated (3, 5 Gy) 1 day before tumor cell inoculation. Necropsy was performed on all tumor-inoculated animals.
Immunohistochemistry of tumor
Samples from liver and spleen of rituximab-treated and untreated mice excised 28 days after tumor cell inoculation were fixed in 10% neutral buffered Formalin for 24 h and processed for embedding in paraffin blocks. Five-micron sections were cut and mounted on poly(L-lysine)-coated slides. The slides were pretreated with microwave in citrate buffer for 10 min and then immunostained using the DAKO ARK Kit (DAKO, Glostrup, Denmark). As primary Ab, the anti-CD20 7D1 clone (Novocastra, Newcastle, U.K.) was used at a 1/25 dilution. The slides were developed with 3,3-diaminobenzidine, counterstained with Mayer hematoxylin, dehydrated through graded alcohols, clarified in xylene, and mounted in the EUKIT Balsam (Bioptica, Milano, Italy).
PCR analysis
We collected whole livers, spleens, and bone marrow cells from pairs of rituximab-treated and untreated mice at days 14, 21, and 28 after tumor inoculation. The tissues were homogenized, and genomic DNA was immediately purified according to standard SDS/proteinase K extraction procedures. A total of 500 ng of genomic DNA was amplified by PCR in 10 mM Tris-HCl, pH 8.3, 50 mM KCl, 0.2 mM dNTP, 2 mM MgCl2 with 0.5 U Taq DNA polymerase and 1.5 x 10-7 M of forward (5'-AATTCAGTAAATGGGACTTTCCCG-3') and reverse (5'-ACTATGTTAGATTTGGGTCTGGAG-3') primers. Amplifications were performed with a 5-min denaturation step at 95°C, followed by 30 cycles of denaturation at 95°C for 1 min, annealing at 64°C for 1 min, and extension at 72°C for 1 min. Samples were run on a 0.8% agarose gel. The gels were treated for 2x 30 min in 0.4 M NaOH, 0.6 M NaCl, followed by 2x 30 min in 0.25 M Tris-HCl, pH 7.5, 1.5 M NaCl before blotting onto a Genescreen membrane (NEN Life Science Products, Boston, MA). A 0.9-kb DNA fragment containing the entire human CD20 coding sequence was labeled with 32P using the Megaprime DNA Labeling kit (Amersham Biosciences, Little Chalfont, U.K.) and used for hybridization following standard procedures. To verify that all DNA samples could be amplified by PCR, a normal murine endogenous gene (ptx3) was also amplified as a control using specific primers, as described (5'-AGCAATGCACCTCCCTGCGAT-3'; 5'-TCCTCGGTGGGATGAAGTCCA-3') (22). Briefly, 250 ng DNA was used and amplified for 23 cycles. PCR products were run in a 2% agarose gel.
ADCC and NK assays in vitro
ADCC were performed by standard 51Cr release. Mouse NK effector cells were obtained essentially as described (23). Briefly, murine spleens were collected from age-matched C57BL/6 wild-type or C1qa-/- animals by mechanical disruption. Cells were washed and cultured for 48 h in RPMI 1640 medium containing 10% FCS and 1000 U/ml human rIL-2 (Chiron, Siena, Italy). Cells were then collected, washed, and counted. Target cells were labeled with 30 µCi 51Cr sodium chromate, washed, and incubated for 30 min at 4°C in presence or absence of 10 µg/ml rituximab or 1F5 Ab. A total of 104 target cells was incubated in triplicates in U-bottom 96-well plate with increasing amounts of effector cells for 5 h at 37°C or with 0.2% SDS, in 200 µl. A total of 100 µl of supernatant was collected, and released 51Cr was counted in a gamma counter (Wallac Wizard 3; Perkin-Elmer, Shelton, CT). Percentage of lysis was calculated as 100 x (sample release - spontaneous release)/(total release - spontaneous release).
For evaluation of NK activity, the 51Cr-labeled YAC-1 cells were used as target. Mice were either untreated or treated with 100 µg poly(I:C) i.p. (Amersham) 1 day before spleens were collected. Lysis of target cells by spleen effector cells was measured as for ADCC.
Proliferation and viability assays
EL4-CD20+ cells were plated at 104 cells/well in 96-well plates in presence or absence of 10 µg/ml rituximab. After 48 h of culture, 0.5 µCi [3H]thymidine (proliferation) or 1/10 vol alamar blue solution (viability) (Biosource, Camarillo, CA) was added in each well, as described (7). Viability assays included a set of wells in which 0.25% Triton X-100 was added 30 min before the alamar blue, to set the background fluorescence (100% dead cells), according to the manufacturers instructions. Incubation was carried on for an additional 16 h, and plates were either harvested (thymidine) or read in a fluorometer (Cytofluor 2300; Millipore, Bedford, MA), with excitation at 530 nm and emission at 590 nm.
C lysis in vitro
Target cells were labeled with 51Cr sodium chromate and washed twice. Cells were plated at 2 x 104 cells/well in 96-well plates in presence or absence of 10 µg/ml rituximab or 1F5 and freshly drawn mouse (30%) or rat (20%) serum. Incubation was conducted for 5 or 1 h at 37°C, respectively, and an aliquot of supernatant was counted in a gamma counter.
| Results |
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To determine the role of C and ADCC in the therapeutic activity of rituximab in vivo, we have set up a new model of murine lymphoma that stably expresses the human CD20 molecule. For this purpose, we infected the EL4 murine T lymphoma cell line with a retrovirus carrying the human CD20 cDNA coding sequence. The retrovector carried the Moloney murine leukemia virus LTR, which also served as promoter for the transgene (17). Infected CD20-positive cells were sorted by FACS, and the selected cells were shown to stably express high levels of CD20 on 99% of the cells even after several months in continuous culture (Fig. 1A). EL4-CD20+ cells express 124,000 CD20 molecules/cell, as determined using calibrated beads, which is comparable to the levels of CD20 observed in primary human B-NHL (range 71,000170,000 in six cases) or in human lymphoma cell lines (DHL4 and BJAB: 209,000 and 170,000 molecules/cell, respectively) (data not shown).
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To test rituximab activity and compare it with that of the murine IgG2a anti-CD20 Ab 1F5, we injected groups of animals with 150 µg rituximab i.p., or with an equivalent dose of 1F5 1 day after tumor inoculation. This dose corresponds to the standard dose of 375 mg/m2 used in the clinic. As control, five animals received the same dose of an irrelevant IgG1 humanized Ab (the anti-human IL-2R
-chain daclizumab), whereas the rest of the animals (n = 12) received saline only after EL4-CD20+ inoculation. As shown in Fig. 1B, a single injection of rituximab or 1F5 led to survival of all treated mice, whereas daclizumab had no significant effect. In these experiments, we sacrificed the rituximab-treated animals 120 days after tumor inoculation and found that all animals were still tumor free at this time. Six rituximab-treated animals were kept longer and were still free of tumor 5 mo after tumor cell inoculation. We reproducibly obtained the same results in a series of at least five consecutive experiments.
We performed immunoperoxidase staining of liver and spleen sections excised 4 wk after EL4-CD20+ inoculation and using an Ab specific for human CD20. Livers showed a diffuse metastatic infiltration of CD20+ lymphoma cells (Fig. 1C). Similarly, spleen sections showed massive infiltration of CD20-positive lymphoma cells (data not shown). On the contrary, the livers and spleens of animals inoculated with tumor cells followed by rituximab treatment did not show evidence of tumor cell infiltration and retained their normal tissue architecture (Fig. 1D and data not shown).
We also followed tumor growth by PCR analysis using primers specific for the human CD20 cDNA. We purified DNA from different organs excised from pairs of animals sacrificed at weekly intervals after tumor cell inoculation. EL4-CD20+ cells could already be detected by PCR at week 2 after tumor cell inoculation in bone marrow and spleen and at week 3 in liver (Fig. 1E, lanes 1 and 2, and data not shown). The presence of EL4-CD20+ cells was very evident in all organs at week 4 (Fig. 1E, lane 3). In contrast, in animals inoculated with EL4-CD20+ cells and treated with rituximab, the presence of EL4-CD20+ cells could be detected at weeks 23 in bone marrow and spleen, but was undetectable in all organs at week 4 (Fig. 1E, lanes 46, and data not shown). These data show that rituximab has a relatively slow effect on tumor cell growth because CD20+ cells could still be detected at weeks 23 in treated animals in spleen and bone marrow. As a control, all DNA samples were also amplified with primers specific for an endogenous mouse gene (ptx3). The data show that the control gene could be amplified from all DNA samples, demonstrating the integrity of all DNA preparations used (Fig. 1F).
We also determined whether rituximab maintained therapeutic activity even if given at later time points. The same experiment was therefore performed, inoculating 8 x 103 EL4-CD20+ cells i.v. on day 0 and 250 µg rituximab i.p. on day 1, 2, or 3. As shown in Fig. 2, although retarding rituximab administration diminished slightly the therapeutic effect, still 80 and 60% of the animals were cured when the Ab was given at day 2 or 3, respectively.
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Rituximab does not affect EL4-CD20+ cell growth or viability in vitro
Rituximab has been shown previously to directly inhibit the proliferation or induce apoptosis of some human leukemic B cells in vitro (26). Thus, the therapeutic activity of rituximab in vivo in our syngeneic mouse model may have been due to a direct effect of rituximab on the growth of EL4-CD20+ cells. This point was therefore investigated. EL4-CD20+ cells were cultured in presence or absence of rituximab for 64 h. Proliferation was measured by a standard thymidine uptake assay and viability using the alamar blue dye (7, 27). The data shown in Fig. 3 demonstrate that rituximab did not affect either proliferation or viability in vitro. The same results were obtained after 4 days of treatment with rituximab (data not shown).
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Depletion of NK, PMN, or T cells does not affect rituximab therapeutic activity
Rituximab is a chimeric Ab carrying the human IgG1 Fc portion. To verify that rituximab was able to activate ADCC with murine effector cells, we performed ADCC assays using the EL4-CD20+ cells as target and murine splenic cells as effectors. As positive control, the assay was also performed with the murine 1F5 Ab. Murine splenic cells were able to lyse 75% of EL4-CD20+ targets after 5-h incubation in presence of either rituximab or 1F5, with 1520% lysis above background in absence of Ab (Fig. 4A). These data demonstrate that rituximab and 1F5 can mediate ADCC of the EL4-CD20+ target cells by C57BL/6 splenic cells.
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1 (anti-murine IL-2R
-chain) did not recognize the EL4-CD20+ lymphoma cells (data not shown). Groups of C57BL/6 mice (n = 6 per group) were then depleted of NK cells by repeated injection of TM-
1, as described previously (19), starting 2 days before tumor cell inoculation. We then inoculated the standard dose of EL4-CD20+ cells in both treated and control mice, followed or not by the standard dose of rituximab 1 day after. Both control and anti-NK-treated animals died within 31 days following tumor cell inoculation, as expected. Rituximab was able to cure 100% of the animals in both the control and anti-NK-treated groups (Fig. 5A). Also, in this case, we sacrificed all rituximab-treated animals at 120 days and over and found no evidence of tumor growth in both groups. These data show that NK cells are not required for rituximab activity in vivo. That Ab treatment had depleted NK cells was shown in separate groups of animals by complete inhibition of NK activity against the YAC1 target, 2 days after treatment (data not shown), in agreement with published results (19).
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RIII receptor (28, 29), because mouse PMN do not express Fc
RI (30). We therefore investigated their possible role in the response to rituximab by depletion with the PMN-specific anti-GR1 mAb RB6-8C5, as described previously (20). Ab treatment led after 2 days to a 91% (±3%) decrease of peripheral blood PMN compared with untreated animals (data not shown), in agreement with previous results (20). Also, in this case, PMN depletion did not affect tumor growth in animals inoculated with EL4-CD20+ cells, nor did it affect the therapeutic efficacy of rituximab, because all anti-PMN-treated and control animals were cured by rituximab up to 3 mo after tumor cell inoculation (Fig. 5B). We also tested the effect of depletion of both NK and PMN cells simultaneously, using the same protocols as above. As shown in Fig. 5C, rituximab still efficaciously cured animals injected with the standard dose of EL4-CD20+ cells, even after in vivo depletion of both NK and PMN cells.
Because T cells have been reported to play a role in the protection of animals from EL4 tumor under some experimental conditions (31), we have tested the role of T cells in rituximab activity, using irradiated nude athymic mice. Injection of 8 x 103 EL4-CD20+ cells i.v. in these animals led to tumor growth, resulting in death within 3050 days (Fig. 5D). The administration of the standard 150 µg dose of rituximab 1 day after tumor led to survival of 100% of the animals for at least 100 days (Fig. 5D).
Altogether, these data demonstrate that NK cells, PMN, and T lymphocytes are dispensable for rituximab therapeutic activity in vivo against EL4-CD20+ cells.
C1q is required for the therapeutic activity of rituximab
Rituximab activates CDC efficiently in vitro using human lymphoma cells and human serum (7, 8). Before investigating the role of C in vivo, we first verified that rituximab was able to activate mouse C in vitro. Addition of 10 µg/ml rituximab or 1F5 led to lysis of 21% (±4%) and 18% (±3%) of EL4-CD20+ cells after 5 h in presence of 30% freshly drawn mouse serum (data not shown), respectively. Serum alone had no effect. Because mouse serum is known to be poorly lytic in vitro (32), we also performed CDC in presence of 20% rat serum. In this case, both rituximab and 1F5 led to over 95% lysis of EL4-CD20+ cells (data not shown). These data demonstrate that rituximab can activate rodent C in vitro with the same efficiency as the murine IgG2a Ab 1F5.
To determine the role of C in vivo, we used syngeneic knockout animals lacking completely C1q, the first component of the classical pathway of C activation (C1qa-/-) (21). Inoculation of the same dose of EL4-CD20+ cells in 15 animals led to tumor growth and animal death indistinguishable from that observed in the wild-type animals (Fig. 6A). In a parallel group of 15 animals, however, injection of the standard dose of rituximab did not alter in any way the survival curve, suggesting that tumor growth was unaffected by Ab treatment (Fig. 6A). Similar experiments were performed with the 1F5 Ab. Again, 1F5 was unable to eradicate tumors in C1q-/- animals (Fig. 6B). In experiments with C1qa-/- animals, we conducted parallel control experiments with wild-type animals that were reproducibly cured by rituximab (Fig. 1B, and data not shown). At necropsy, both rituximab-treated and control C1qa-/- animals showed similar splenomegaly and liver metastases. As expected, the presence of extensive infiltration of EL4-CD20+ cells could be demonstrated in the liver by immunohistochemistry in both control (Fig. 6C) and rituximab-treated animals (Fig. 6D). Finally, PCR analysis clearly demonstrated the presence of tumor cells starting at week 2 in bone marrow and spleen and at weeks 34 in liver in both rituximab-treated and control animals (Fig. 6E). As before, amplification of the control endogenous gene ptx3 demonstrated the integrity of all DNA samples analyzed (Fig. 6F).
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Altogether, these data clearly demonstrate that rituximab or 1F5 is unable to eradicate tumor cells or check tumor growth in vivo in the absence of C1q.
| Discussion |
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In our model, we can exclude a role for apoptosis because we could not detect any induction of apoptosis or inhibition of EL4-CD20+ cell growth in vitro in response to rituximab. Indeed, our results on the role of C in the therapeutic activity of both rituximab and 1F5 are in agreement with those obtained by Glennie and colleagues (33) using a xenograft model of lymphoma and C depletion by cobra venom factor (M. Cragg and M. Glennie, personal communication). Thus, a role for C in vivo does not seem to be restricted to the EL4-CD20+ model.
In our model, we injected EL4-CD20+ cells i.v. to allow dissemination of the tumor cells into hemopoietic organs (spleen and bone marrow), thus more closely mimicking hematological neoplasias. Furthermore, the therapeutic mAbs were given by a different route (i.p.) to avoid rapid C-mediated lysis of tumor cells in the circulation before their homing into the different organs. Interestingly, we could detect by PCR EL4-CD20+ cells in rituximab-treated animals up to weeks 23 in some organs (spleen and bone marrow). This finding suggests that rituximab did not eliminate all tumor cells immediately, but that tumor cell eradication was relatively slow, more similar to that observed in B-NHL patients treated with this Ab. In agreement with a gradual effect of rituximab in vivo, we could show that rituximab still showed strong, although not maximal, therapeutic activity even when given up to 3 days after the tumor. Thus, the therapeutic activity of the mAb was not due simply to immediate elimination of few tumor cells.
In contrast to a requirement for C, a study by Clynes et al. (13) suggested an important role of ADCC in the mechanism of action of rituximab. In their model, rituximab loses full therapeutic activity against a human B lymphoma xenograft in the absence of the Fc
R
-chain common to both Fc
RI and Fc
RIII. A possible explanation for these divergent results is the different model used (an s.c. xenograft in nude mice). Alternatively, C activation may synergize with Fc
R-mediated immune mechanisms. Classical pathway activation leads to target cell opsonization through deposition of C3 and C4 fragments on the cell surface, leading to augmented phagocytosis (39). iC3b deposition also increases ADCC by NK, PMN, and macrophages that express the CR3 receptor in addition to Fc
R (40, 41). Soluble C fragments, in particular C3a and C5a, stimulate strongly the inflammatory response and are chemotactic for neutrophils and other inflammatory cells. C5a also increases F
RIII and decreases Fc
RII expression on macrophages (42). Finally, completion of the C cascade leads to cell lysis through formation of the membrane attack complex containing the C fragments C5b-9 (40). Thus, activation of the C pathway may activate several immune-mediated mechanisms in addition to inducing direct cell lysis. Indeed, recently the CR3 receptor has been shown to participate in the control of melanoma growth by the IgG2a therapeutic mAb TA99 (41), suggesting an interaction between C and ADCC in this model. The data presented in this work showing that NK, PMN, as well as T cells are dispensable for the therapeutic activity of rituximab, however, point to a major role of C-mediated lysis and/or removal by scavenger cells for tumor eradication, at least in our EL4-CD20+ tumor model.
Our results on a role of C in the therapeutic activity of rituximab has homologies to the recent findings obtained with a model of vitiligo, an Ab-mediated antoimmune disease. In this model, Ab-mediated autoimmunity depends on both C and Fc
R (43).
To conclude, this is the first demonstration in vivo of the fundamental role of C activation in the therapeutic activity of rituximab. These conclusions have important implications in the design of new improved version of rituximab, such as point mutants with increased C-activating function (44) or bispecific anti-CD20/CD55 molecules, as well as of other unconjugated IgG1 anti-cancer Abs (1). The murine model presented should prove useful in testing such strategies in vivo.
| Footnotes |
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2 Address correspondence and reprint requests to Dr. Martino Introna, Laboratory of Molecular Immunohaematology, Istituto Ricerche Farmacologiche Mario Negri, via Eritrea 62, 20157 Milano, Italy. E-mail address: martino{at}marionegri.it ![]()
3 Abbreviations used in this paper: CDC, C-dependent cytotoxicity; ADCC, Ab-dependent cellular cytotoxicity; LTR, long terminal repeat; PMN, polymorphonuclear cell. ![]()
4 M. Cragg et al. Submitted for publication. ![]()
Received for publication March 7, 2003. Accepted for publication May 30, 2003.
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