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* Aging Research Center, CeSi, G. dAnnunzio University Foundation, Chieti, Italy;
Department of Oncology and Neurosciences, "G. DAnnunzio" University, Chieti, Italy;
Department of Clinical and Biological Sciences, University of Turin, Orbassano, Italy;
Department of Molecular, Cellular and Animal Biology, University of Camerino, Camerino, Italy; and
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Cancer Research Section, Department of Experimental Pathology, University of Bologna, Bologna, Italy
| Abstract |
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| Introduction |
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BALB-neuT transgenic mice carrying the transforming rat (r-) HER-2 oncogene under the transcriptional control of the mouse mammary tumor virus overexpress the r-p185 in their mammary, salivary, and harderian glands and the epididymis. However, all female BALB-neuT mice develop lethal mammary carcinomas (12), whereas indolent acinar parotid adenocarcinomas arise sporadically in aging males (13).
Inactivation of p53 is another common genetic event of human salivary and breast carcinomas (14, 15, 16, 17). As p53 deficiency synergizes to promote HER-2 carcinogenesis (17), we first generated BALB-neuT mice with knocked out p53 gene (BALB-neuTp53 KO). However, as these mice develop simultaneously more than one type of tumor, the potential of a vaccine to cure and prevent salivary carcinomas cannot be neatly teased apart (18).
In the present study, BALB-neuT mice were made transgenic for a mutated form of p53 (BALB-neuT/p53172R-H mice) that more closely resembles the human Li-Fraumeni syndrome (19). Substitution of aa 172 from arginine to histidine (R-H) is the mouse equivalent of the most common p53 alteration (175, R-H) in humans. It results in a gain-of-function and not just a dominant-negative phenotype (20). Transgenic female mice expressing p53172R-H targeted by a whey acidic protein promoter showed no apparent alterations in normal salivary and mammary development. Even so, they displayed increased genomic instability and developed mammary carcinomas with shorter latency and faster kinetics than their control littermates in response to dimethylbenz(a)anthracene (21). The p53172R-H mutant allele predisposes mice to a spectrum of tumors that is distinct from that produced by null alleles (22). Moreover, p53 null mice develop less aggressive tumors (23).
Male and female BALB/c mice combining r-HER-2 and p53172R-H overexpression (BALB-neuT/p53172R-H mice) quickly develop fast-growing and highly metastasizing parotid gland carcinomas, whereas the slow progression of their mammary tumors is similar to that of parental BALB-neuT mice and they do not develop mesenchymal tumors. While the cells of early stages of parotid gland neoplastic growth, namely ductal and acinar hyperplasia, strongly overexpress membrane and cytoplasmic r-p185, in situ carcinomas are less intensely r-p185+, and invasive, poorly differentiated carcinomas almost completely lose r-p185 expression. BALB-neuT/p53172R-H thus provide a realistic model for determination of the preventive and curative efficacy against an aggressive salivary carcinoma of a simple and well-defined vaccination regimen that has proved effective against slow growing and constantly r-p185+ mammary tumors (24). In these mice, systemic administration of IL-12 combined with i.m. DNA electroporation of plasmids coding for the extracellular and transmembrane domains of the r-p185 (EC-TM plasmids) persistently prevented carcinoma onset in most mice. The most prominent immunologic features were the production of high titers of anti-r-p185 Abs and the nonappearance of cell-mediated cytotoxic reactivity. The reduced ability to inhibit the growth of multifocal in situ carcinomas goes along with their progressive reduced expression of r-p185.
| Materials and Methods |
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BALB-p53172R-H were obtained by crossing BALB/c wild-type mice (Charles River Laboratories) with FVB/NTgN(Trp53R172H)8512Jmr mice (The Jackson Laboratory) for more than 12 generations. BALB-neuT transgenic mice carrying the activated r-HER-2 oncogene under the transcriptional control of the mouse mammary tumor virus enhancing/promoter have been generated in our laboratories (12). BALB-neuT/p53172R-H mice generated by crossing BALB-p53172R-H females with BALB-neuT males are hemizygous for both the activated r-HER-2 transgene and the murine p53172R-H transgene driven by the whey acidic protein promoter. They were assigned randomly to the control and treatment groups. Similar results were obtained when each experiment was repeated two to three times. The data were cumulated in the figures and tables. Mammary and parotid glands were inspected weekly to note tumor appearance. Tumor masses were measured with calipers in two perpendicular diameters. Progressively growing masses > 1 mm in mean diameter were regarded as tumors. Mice were treated according to the European Union guidelines and to protocols approved by the University of Torino Review Board.
IL-12 administration
Recombinant mouse IL-12 (provided by Dr. S. Wolf, Genetics Institute, Cambridge, MA) was diluted in PBS supplemented with 0.01% mouse serum albumin (MSA; Sigma-Aldrich) and administered i.p. as described previously (12, 25). Starting from the fifth or seventh week of age, mice received a course of one weekly i.p. injection of 0.2 ml of PBS containing MSA plus 100 ng of IL-12, for 4 wk, followed by a 3-wk rest. This course was repeated throughout their life.
Preparation of EC-TM plasmids and in vivo electroporation
The pCMV vector was derived from the pcDNA3 plasmid (Invitrogen Life Technologies) by deleting the SV40 promoter, neomycin resistance gene, and SV40 poly(A). The sequence for the the extracellular (EC) and transmembrane (TM) domains of the protein product of mutated r-p185 were generated from the PCR product using the primers 39-CGCAAGCTTCATCATGGAGCTGGC-59 and 39-CGGAATTCGGGCTGGCTCTCTGCTC-59 and the primers 39-CGCAAGCTTCATGGAGCTGGC-59 and 39-ATGAATTCTTTCCGCATCGTGTACTTCTTCCGG-59, respectively, as previously described (26). PCR products of the expected size were isolated by agarose gel electrophoresis, digested with HindIII and EcoRI, and cloned into the multiple cloning site of the pCMV plasmid to obtain the EC-TM plasmid used in this work. The leader sequence is the same as r-p185 (63 bp from the ATG starting codon of the cloned cDNA). DNA was precipitated, suspended in sterile saline at 1 mg/ml, and stored in aliquots at 20°C for use in immunization protocols (27, 28). Twenty-five micrograms of empty and EC-TM plasmids in 20 µl of 0.9% NaCl with 6 mg/ml polyglutamate were injected bilaterally into the tibial muscle of the hind legs of anesthetized mice. Two 25-ms transcutaneous electric pulses were generated by a T820 electroporator (BTX) with a field strength of 375 V/cm, as previously described in detail (24, 29). Plasmids were electroporated during the first and third week of each IL-12 course and at the same times in the mice that received plasmid electroporation only.
Morphological analyses
For histologic evaluation, tissue samples were fixed in 10% neutral-buffered Formalin, embedded in paraffin, sectioned at 4 µm, and stained with H&E. For immunohistochemistry, paraffin-embedded or acetone-fixed cryostat sections were immunostained with anti-p185 (clone C-18) (Santa Cruz Biotechnology), anti-proliferative cell nuclear Ag (PCNA) (clone PC10) (DakoCytomation), anti-tenascin C (clone MTn-12) (Abcam), and anti-endothelial cells (CD31, PECAM-1, clone MEC13.3) (BD Pharmingen), Abs. After washing, sections were overlaid with biotinylated goat-anti-rat and anti-rabbit Ig (Vector Laboratories) for 30 min. Unbound Ig was removed by washing, and slides were incubated with avidin-biotin complex /alkaline phosphatase (DakoCytomation). For double immunofluorescent staining and confocal analyses, acetone-fixed frozen sections were washed for 5 min in PBS and incubated for 30 min with the first primary Ab. The slides were then washed in PBS for 5 min. Next, sections were incubated for 30 min with biotinylated secondary Ab, washed, and incubated with Alexa Fluor 488-conjugated streptavidin (Molecular Probes) (1/800) for 2030 min. After washing, sections were incubated for 30 min with the second primary Ab, washed again, and incubated for 30 min with biotinylated secondary Ab. After washing, sections were incubated with Alexa Fluor 594-conjugated streptavidin (Molecular Probes) (1/800) for 2030 min and then washed. Cross-reaction between the first secondary Ab and Alexa Fluor 594 was prevented by saturation of all its binding sites with Alexa Fluor 488. Slides were mounted with Vectashield medium (Vector Laboratories) and examined with a Zeiss LSM 510 Meta laser scanning confocal microscope (Zeiss).
Cells
TUBO r-p185+ cells are a cloned cell line from a carcinoma arising in a BALB-neuT mouse (28), whereas r-p185+ 3T3-NKB cells are from BALB/c 3T3 fibroblasts stably cotransfected with the wild-type r-HER-2, mouse class I H-2Kd and B7.1 genes (24). Cells were cultured in DMEM (BioWhittaker Europe) supplemented with 20% FBS (Invitrogen Life Technologies).
Ab response
Sera were collected at week 9, 20, and 40 from individual mice that had received two EC-TM plasmid electroporations and four systemic administrations of IL-12. After 1/100 dilution in PBS-azide-BSA (Sigma-Aldrich), the presence of anti r-p185 Abs was determined by flow cytometry using 3T3-NKB cells. FITC-conjugated goat anti-mouse Ab specific for mouse IgG Fc (DakoCytomation) was use to detect bound primary Ab. For control, we used a normal mouse serum. mAb Ab4 (Oncogene Research Products), which recognizes the EC domain of r-p185, was used as a positive control. After washing, cells were resuspended in PBS-azide-BSA containing 1 mg/ml propidium iodide to remove dead cells and evaluated in a CyAn ADP (DakoCytomation). Serial Ab4 dilutions were used to generate a standard curve to determine the concentration (µg/ml) of anti r-p185, as previously described in detail (24). For isotype determinations, individual sera from three 16-wk-old mice were diluted 1/20 and incubated with BALB/c 3T3 and BALB/c 3T3-NKB. Cells were then incubated for 30 min with rat biotin-conjugated Ab anti-mouse IgA, IgM, IgG1, IgG2a, IgG2b, and IgG3 (Caltag Laboratories). After washing, cells were incubated with 5 µl of streptavidin-PE (DakoCytomation) and resuspended in PBS-azide-BSA containing 1 mg/ml propidium iodide to gate dead cells. Flow cytometry was performed with a CyAn ADP (DakoCytomation).
In vitro and in vivo cytotoxicity assays
Fresh or restimulated spleen cells (Spc) were assayed in a 48-h [3H]TdR release assay at E:T from 50:1 to 6:1 in round-bottom, 96-well microtiter plates in triplicate as previously described in detail (29). Spc were restimulated in vitro by culturing for 6 days 1 x 107 cells with 5 x 105 mitomycin C (Sigma-Aldrich)-treated r-p185+ TUBO or 3T3-NKB cells in the presence of 10 U/ml rIL-2 (Eurocetus). In some experiments, Spc were pulsed for 48 h with BrdU labeling solution at 37°C in 5% CO2 with 5 or 2.5 µg/ml of the r-p1856371 (TYVPANASL) (INBIOS Srl; Biotech Products). This peptide is predicted to bind the H-2d glycoproteins with high affinity (
www.syfpeithi.de/
). It was assayed for amino acid composition, HPLC homogeneity, and mass spectrometry weight, dissolved in PBS, aliquoted at 1 mg/ml, and stored frozen at 20°C until used. BrdU uptake was detected with the cell proliferation ELISA BrdU kit (Roche Diagnostic).
In vivo cytotoxicity assay was performed as described by Ritchie et al. (30), with slight modifications. Briefly, a single-cell suspension of 107 naive Spc/ml were labeled with two different concentration (0.5 or 5.0 µM) of the fluorescent dye CFSE (Molecular Probes). Spc labeled with 5 µM were also pulsed with r-p1856371 9-mer peptide with H-2Kd restriction element (31) for 1 h at room temperature. The two Spc populations were mixed together in equal amounts and injected i.v. into three control and treated mice. Mice were sacrificed 48 h later, and single-cell suspensions from spleens were processed individually to evaluate the presence of CFSE high and low cells by CyAn ADP (DakoCytomation) after adding propidium iodine to exclude dead cells. The specific cytolytic activity was calculated as: 100 x (percentage CFSElow cells percentage CFSEhigh cells)/percentage CFSElow cells.
| Results |
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A few strongly r-p185+ epithelial cells were initially evident in the intercalated ducts and acini of the parotid glands of 3-wk-old BALB-neuT/p53172R-H mice. One week later, they also expressed the PCNA and gave rise to multiple foci of typical ductal and acinar hyperplasia (Fig. 1). During the fifth week, the acinar hyperplasia shrank, whereas the typical ductal areas expanded and became atypical (Fig. 2, ac). In the seventh week, the parotid glands of most mice displayed multifocal in situ carcinomas wherein the ducts were replaced by discrete, rounded, solid aggregates of r-p185+ and PCNA+ neoplastic epithelial cells with no lumens or fenestrations (Fig. 2, df). From the eighth week onward, these areas merged to form poorly differentiated larger tumors. Tumor progression was paralleled by a progressive reduction in r-p185 expression that was almost undetectable in the cells of carcinomas of 10-wk-old mice. By contrast, positivity remained high and widely distributed (Fig. 2, gi). The lung metastases observable from the 10th wk were also r-p185 negative. Progressive disappearance of r-p185 expression unaccompanied by a parallel reduction in PCNA expression was never found in p-185+ carcinomas arising in BALB-neuT mice (12, 28, 29, 32). After the 10th wk, the parotids also displayed lesions in dissimilar progression stages wherein progressive diminution of p-185 expression from the more to the less differentiated stages was evident (Fig. 2, jl). This tumor progression occurred earlier in the males. At 4 wk of age, in fact, their multifocal hyperplasia was substantially more advanced and wider, while typical hyperplasia had already progressed to atypical hyperplasia and in situ carcinomas were present in
50% 1 wk later (data not shown).
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Prevention of carcinomas
As previous work had shown that DNA vaccination combined with IL-12s antiangiogenic and immunomodulatory activity slows the progression of mammary lesions in BALB-neuT mice and markedly potentiates anti-HER-2 immunity (24), we determined whether this combination is also effective against the very fast progression of the parotid lesions of BALB-neuT/p53172R-H mice in which p53 had lost its normal function. Therefore, throughout their life, these mice received courses of four weekly i.p. injections of 100 ng of IL-12, followed by a 3-wk rest, together with i.m. electroporation of EC-TM plasmids during the first and third week of each course.
In this preventive setting, the first IL-12 injection was administered at the fifth week of age, when the parotid glands display multiple typical hyperplastic foci that already overexpress r-p185 (Fig. 4).
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Histological inspection of the parotid glands of 9-wk-old mice, i.e., 1 wk after the end of the first course (see Fig. 4), showed that several reactive cells had infiltrated the stroma. Epithelial cell ghosts and hemosiderin accumulations were the outcome of microinflammation and hemorrhage (Fig. 6a). Histological examination of tumor-free mice at wk 20 (4 wk after the end of the second course) disclosed normal parotid glands (Fig. 6b) free from r-p185+ and PCNA+ cells (Fig. 6c), a normal microvessel density (Fig. 6d) and tenascin-C lining only normal striated and intercalated ducts (Fig. 6e).
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The remarkable ability of this combination to block parotid carcinogenesis and prevent carcinoma onset prompted us to assess its ability to cure initial and actively proliferating in situ carcinomas. All BALB-neuT/p53172R-H mice receiving electroporations alone starting from wk 7 developed parotid carcinomas, even though tumor multiplicity was reduced (Fig. 5a). By contrast,
30% of mice (25% of males and 33% of females) receiving the combination from wk 7 onward was tumor-free at wk 40 (Fig. 5c). Their parotid glands were absolutely normal and free from r-p185+ and PCNA+ cells. Postinflammatory fibrotic foci were absent or very scanty. The lower preventive efficacy of the combination was probably due to the earlier appearance of r-p185+ cells and the faster progression of parotid carcinogenesis in male as opposed to female mice.
Immune events associated with vaccination
High titers of anti r-p185 Abs were present in the sera of mice after the first course (Fig. 7a), whereas significantly lower titers were found when electroporation was given alone and no Abs were observed in untreated mice and those receiving IL-12 or empty plasmids only. At wk 16, anti-r-p185 Abs were of the IgG subclasses, with IgG2a as the most represented (Fig. 7b). Spc collected at 9, 16, and 40 wk of age from mice receiving the combination, whether freshly isolated or recovered from 6-day cultures with mitomycin-C-inactivated r-p185+ TUBO and 3T3-NKB cells, displayed a marginal cytotoxicity against both TUBO and 3T3-NKB targets (data not shown). Marginal or absent cytotoxic responses were observed when the assays were performed earlier and later. As the dominant r-p185 epitope recognized by CTL in BALB/c mice has been defined (31), it was possible to assess both the cytotoxic response triggered in vivo (Fig. 7c) and the proliferative response of Spc in vitro (Fig. 7d). While nontolerant wild-type BALB/c female mice treated from wk 5 with IL-12 and DNA vaccine developed a marked cytolytic response to target Spc pulsed with r-p1856371 (TYVPANASL) peptide with H-2Kd restriction element, no significant cytotoxicity was evident in transgenic BALB-neuT/p53172R-H females (Fig. 7b). This lack of cytotoxic response in vitro and in vivo fits in well with the reduced proliferative response of Spc from BALB-neuT/p53172R-H-vaccinated mice, as compared with wild-type BALB/c-vaccinated mice, when incubated with the TYVPANASL peptide as evaluated 1 wk after the first course of IL-12 and DNA vaccine (Fig. 7c).
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| Discussion |
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30%. These results extend previous demonstrations of the ability of this combination to protect against both a slowly progressing HER-2 mammary carcinogenesis (12, 24, 35) and a fast and devastating model of parotid carcinogenesis whose earlier stages are characterized by r-p185 overexpression that decreases as tumor progresses. In BALB-neuT/p53172R-H mice, fast and lethal parotid carcinogenesis stems from an association of HER-2 oncogene activation with p53 oncosuppressor gene functional inactivation. In its early stages, combination of DNA vaccine electroporation with systemic IL-12 is highly effective, whereas electroporation and IL-12 alone are ineffective. As r-p185 overexpression is markedly evident during the early parotid hyperplasia and decreases during the passage from in situ to invasive carcinoma, the combination becomes less effective. A similar progressive disappearance of r-p185 expression unaccompanied by a parallel reduction in PCNA expression was never observed in p-185+ carcinomas arising in BALB-neuT mice. In these mice, r-p185 is equally overexpressed in preneoplastic lesions, invasive cancer, and metastatic cells (12, 28, 29, 32). During the progression of the parotid lesions in BALB-neuT/p53172R-H mice, PCNA cell positivity remains widely distributed and thus becomes progressively less coupled with r-p185 expression. This suggests that the p53 deficiency promotes genetic instability and favors the emergence of tumor clones whose growth becomes independent from HER-2 overexpression (36, 37, 38).
The double requirement of HER-2 oncogene activation and p53 inactivation makes several features of BALB-neuT/p53172R-H oncogenesis akin to that in humans (39). Most human salivary gland carcinomas, especially the more aggressive forms, are associated with amplification of the HER-2 oncogene and overexpression of its product. Overexpression and functional impairment of p53 have been noted in most salivary polymorphous low-grade carcinomas, squamous cell carcinomas, and carcinomas arising in benign lesions, such as pleomorphic parotid adenomas (14, 15, 16), where the appearance of cells with nuclear p53 accumulation is regarded as the originating precancerous lesion (16).
In a preventive setting, DNA vaccine electroporation combined with systemic IL-12 administration started on wk 5 blocked the neoplastic progression of hyperplastic and preneoplastic lesions in 70% of mice (100% of the females and 50% of the males). When it was started at wk 7 to cure tumors, it was successful in
30% of mice of both sexes. These results show that this combination is an extremely effective way of both blocking the progression of and destroying r-p185+ cells accumulated in typical and atypical hyperplasia foci but has a limited ability to cure in situ carcinomas. The preventive treatment was less effective in males, probably because areas of r-p185-negative carcinoma were already present, whereas in females of the same age there were only typical and atypical hyperplasia foci and carcinomatous lesions appeared later. The earlier development of such foci in males, coupled with the presence of carcinoma as early as the fifth week, is in line with the observation that in rodents the development of the salivary ducts, which in BALB-neuT/p53172R-H mice contain the most r-p185 expressing cells, is under multihormonal regulation and larger in males (40).
The curative potential of IL-12 in combination with DNA vaccine was associated with a marked anti-r-p185 Ab response in the absence of a significant CD8 T cell-mediated cytotoxicity. This absence is not surprising, because HER-2 transgenic mice express r-HER-2 in the thymus, and central and peripheral tolerance takes place (41, 42). Spectratyping (43) showed that central tolerance in transgenic BALB-neuT and BALB-neuT/p53172R-H mice mainly acts by silencing the CD8+ component of the TCR repertoire, although an high avidity CD4+ T cell response escapes tolerance induction (S. Rolla, F. Cavallo, and F. Ria, manuscript in preparation). Induction of a high titer of Abs appears to account for both the prevention and cure of fast growing and early metastasizing salivary carcinomas. These provocative findings are germane to similar results observed in mice transgenic for HER-2 oncogene that undergo mammary carcinogenesis, which show that vaccine-induced inhibition of HER-2 carcinogenesis mostly, if not solely, rests on the elicitation of a high titer of anti-HER-2 Abs (26, 28, 44, 45, 46). By hampering r-p185s ability to form homo- and heterodimers that spontaneously transduce proliferative signals (47) and by stripping r-p185 from the cell membrane and causing its internalization in the cytoplasm (48, 49, 50), Abs inhibit the cell signaling properties of r-p185 and block the proliferative ability of HER-2+ tumor cells (11, 29, 44). Anti-r-p185 Abs also affect tumor growth by mediating Ab-dependent cell-mediated cytotoxicity and complement-dependent cytotoxicity (51).
In the mammary lesions of BALB-neuT mice, anti-r-p185 Abs induced by the vaccine and IL-12 combination down-regulate r-p185 on the cell membrane of mammary lesions paralleled by a marked decrease of tumor cell proliferation and a marked recruitment of reactive cells in and around the preneoplastic lesions frequently surrounded by fibrotic tissue (24). In BALB-neuT/p53172R-H mice, the inflammatory infiltrate and postinflammatory fibrosis were scanty or absent. Only mice treated at 79 wk displayed minute areas of fibrosis, probably the outcome of prior inflammation. In most tumor-free mice, the parotid was fully normal and free from r-p185+ and PCNA+ cells. The absence of morphological indicators of inflammation or tissue necrosis indicated that the proliferative blockade and/or destruction of r-p185+ cells caused by the combination must have taken place in a discrete manner without leaving the slightest trace as soon as these cells appeared in the ducts or acini, or were still dispersed in multiple hyperplasia foci since their massive destruction when grouped together in a single solid tumor mass would have led to inflammation and reparative fibrosis. These patterns are strongly suggestive of a direct role of anti-r-p185 Ab on tumor cell proliferation and survival. The sustained presence of high titers of anti-r-p185 Ab leads to selective removal of cells forming the neoplastic lesions and elimination of the continuously reappearing r-p185 neoplastic cells, as occurs in mice in which the transgene is embedded in the genome.
While IL-12s enhancement of the specific protective response elicited by DNA vaccine electroporation fits in well with its powerful adjuvant activity in a variety of vaccines against infectious diseases (52, 53, 54), the curative potential of the combination appears to be also the outcome of IL-12s ability to hamper early carcinogenesis by inhibiting HER-2 tumor angiogenesis (34, 55). Present data suggest that IL-12s antiangiogenic activity contributed to the success of the vaccination by inhibiting the growth and progression of the hyperplasia, since the vascular network supporting such growth was slightly more developed than that of the normal gland and composed of small, delicate, and newly formed capillaries. These findings are in accord with our previous finding that the antiangiogenic activity of systemic IL-12 is very effective on those fragile capillary sprouts, which accompany the shift from the preneoplastic to the neoplastic condition. After the transition from hyperplasia to invasive carcinoma, the lower sensitivity of mature and differentiated blood vessels tapers off the efficacy of IL-12s antiangiogenic activity (12, 25, 35).
In the successfully treated mice, the complete disappearance of hyperplasia foci was also illustrated by the absence of tenascin-C, a hexameric extracellular matrix glycoprotein expressed during embryonic development and re-expressed in remodeling and proliferative processes, such as wound healing and tumorigenesis. In human salivary gland tumors, tenascin-C is mostly observed in less differentiated and more highly malignant tumors, such as solid carcinomas. Therefore, its absence in the glands of the treated mice suggests that both proliferation and remodeling following the destruction of r-p185+ had been abolished.
We have previously documented that in male BALB-neuT mice expression of the r-HER-2 oncogene product in the ducts and acini of the parotid gland results in typical (at 45 wk of age) and then atypical (from the 6th to the 18th wk) hyperplasia preceding the development of cancers from the confluence of multiple ductal hyperplastic foci, whereas hyperplastic acini behave as an abortive preneoplastic lesion (13). Development of cancer was thus preceded by a long period marked by hyperplasia alone. During this time span, the salivary gland cells overexpressing the activated r-HER-2 oncogene product probably underwent further gene changes inducing the transformation of typical and atypical hyperplasia into r-p185+ carcinoma. By contrast, 8-wk-old male and female BALB-neuT/p53172R-H mice developed p185-negative poorly differentiated and invasive parotid carcinomas that were much more aggressive and less differentiated than the acinar cell carcinomas previously observed in older male BALB-neuT mice. Morphological examination showed that development of their hyperplastic and preneoplastic lesions occurred from the fourth to the seventh week. This model with its identification of the seventh to the eighth week as the time of transition to a r-p185-expression-independent poorly differentiated cancer illustrates both the potential and the limits of vaccination and permits a direct assessment of the potential of a timely vaccine.
Greater and long-lasting protection can still be conferred against even highly genetically unstable tumors provided vaccination begins before genetic instability becomes coupled with an intense tumor cell proliferation that permits the expansion of r-p185-negative escaping clones. Tumor cells in the preneoplastic lesions of BALB-neuT/p53172R-H mice are potentially very unstable from the beginning. However, in the absence of a significant proliferation, these cells do not give rise to a significant population of escaping cells, and the vaccine provides a major protection. Fewer mice are protected, and less efficient induction of immunity and a lower efficacy of effector mechanisms are evident if vaccination begins when advanced multifocal lesions are present.
In conclusion, these results provide a direct endorsement of the notion that vaccines may provide a sustained inhibition of precancerous lesions even if they fail to control invasive cancer (56, 57). Therefore, the message for human disease is neither to refrain from vaccinating patients with Li-Fraumeni syndrome, nor that due to tumor intrinsic genetic instability there is little point in vaccinating against a disappearing Ag. Instead, present data suggest that a vaccine may be able to convey a significant and long-lasting protection against indolent precancerous lesions, even when a mutated p53 enables the early development of a population of Ag-negative potentially aggressive tumor cells. The next key questions to be addressed concern the possibility of extending the efficacy of vaccination to cope with more advanced neoplastic stages. Vaccination against multiple target Ags expressed by preneoplastic lesions (58) may perhaps reduce the likelihood of an escape from immune attack. However, while recent data on cancer progression have shifted the onset of genetic instability to the early phases of the natural history of tumors, the accumulation of genetic "hits" leading to cancer progression is a function of time (59). The low proliferation rate of indolent preneoplastic lesions cuts down the likelihood of selection of immune-resistant clones, whereas the vaccine-alerted immune response may inhibit the lesion before complete neoplastic transformation takes place. Because preventive vaccines operate during the early phases of carcinogenesis, effective inhibition of r-p185+ cells arrests the whole process and renders the selection of r-p185-loss variants unlikely (60). Translation of these preclinical observations into a novel preventive treatment in cancer is a far-distant prospect. Even so, our results provide a preclinical picture of ability of vaccines to hampering early stages of carcinogenesis.
| Disclosures |
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| Footnotes |
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1 This work was supported by grants from Italian Association for Cancer Research, the Italian Ministries for the Universities and Health, the University of Torino, Compagnia di San Paolo, Torino, and the Center of Excellence on Aging, University of Chieti, Italy. ![]()
2 F.C. and P.M. contributed equally to this work. ![]()
3 Address correspondence and reprint requests to Dr. Federica Cavallo, Department of Clinical and Biological Sciences, University of Turin, Ospedale San Luigi Gonzaga, I-10043 Orbassano, Italy. E-mail address: federica.cavallo{at}unito.it ![]()
4 Abbreviations used in this paper: p185, HER-2 transgene protein; r-, rat; MSA, mouse serum albumin; EC-TM, transmembrane and extracellular domains of r-p185; Spc, spleen cell; DC, dendritic cell; PCNA, proliferative cell nuclear Ag. ![]()
Received for publication June 11, 2005. Accepted for publication March 31, 2006.
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and B cell dependent. J. Immunol. 173: 2288-2296. This article has been cited by other articles:
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B. Vasir, Z. Wu, K. Crawford, J. Rosenblatt, C. Zarwan, A. Bissonnette, D. Kufe, and D. Avigan Fusions of Dendritic Cells with Breast Carcinoma Stimulate the Expansion of Regulatory T Cells while Concomitant Exposure to IL-12, CpG Oligodeoxynucleotides, and Anti-CD3/CD28 Promotes the Expansion of Activated Tumor Reactive Cells J. Immunol., July 1, 2008; 181(1): 808 - 821. [Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF] |
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