Antigen‐presenting cells pulsed with unfractionated tumor‐derived peptides are potent tumor vaccines
- 1 March 1997
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Wiley in European Journal of Immunology
- Vol. 27 (3), 589-597
- https://doi.org/10.1002/eji.1830270304
Abstract
Vaccination with peptides isolated from tumor cells circumvents the need for identifying specific tumor rejection antigens and extends the use of active immunotherapy to the majority of cancers where specific tumor antigens have not yet been identified. In this study, we examined the efficacy of tumor vaccines composed of unfractionated tumor peptides presented by antigen-presenting cells (APC) to induce cytotoxic T lymphocyte (CTL) responses and tumor immunity. RMA-S cells pulsed with peptides isolated from ovalbumin (OVA)-expressing tumor cells were highly effective at inducing primary, OVA-specific CTL responses in vitro and priming CTL responses in vivo. In addition, tumor peptide-pulsed RMA-S cells induced protective immunity in mice when challenged with OVA-expressing tumor cells. To enhance the clinical relevance of these studies, cells pulsed with tumor peptides were evaluated in the poorly immunogenic, B16/F10.9 melanoma post-surgical metastasis model. Treatment of tumor-bearing mice with peptide-pulsed RMA-S cells or with adherent splenocytes (enriched for professional APC) caused a significant reduction in lung metastases. The antimetastatic effect of peptide-pulsed splenocytes could be further enhanced by pretreating the cells with antisense oligonucleotides directed against the TAP-2 gene which was previously shown to increase the density of specific peptide/MHC class I complexes and thereby improve the APC function of the treated cells (Nair et el., J. Immunol. 1996. 156: 1772). This study suggests that APC loaded with unfractionated peptides derived from poorly immunogenic, highly metastatic tumor cells may represent a potent form of tumor vaccine.Keywords
This publication has 40 references indexed in Scilit:
- Role of Bone Marrow-Derived Cells in Presenting MHC Class I-Restricted Tumor AntigensScience, 1994
- A molecular model of MHC class-I-restricted antigen processingImmunology Today, 1992
- Naturally-occurring peptide antigens derived from the MHC class-I-restricted processing pathwayImmunology Today, 1991
- Exact prediction of a natural T cell epitopeEuropean Journal of Immunology, 1991
- The Dendritic Cell System and its Role in ImmunogenicityAnnual Review of Immunology, 1991
- Antigen Recognition by Class I-Restricted T LymphocytesAnnual Review of Immunology, 1989
- Introduction of soluble protein into the class I pathway of antigen processing and presentationCell, 1988
- Phenotypically and functionally distinct T-cell subsets in anti-tumor responsesImmunology Today, 1987
- Host resistance directed selectively against H-2-deficient lymphoma variants. Analysis of the mechanism.The Journal of Experimental Medicine, 1985
- Immunobiology of Tissue Transplantation: A Return to the Passenger Leukocyte ConceptAnnual Review of Immunology, 1983