The use of leukemia cells as antigen-presenting cells (APCs) in immunotherapy is critically dependent on their capacity to initiate and sustain an antitumor-specific immune response. Previous studies suggested that pediatric B-cell precursor acute lymphoblastic leukemia (BCP-ALL) cells could be manipulated in vitro through the CD40-CD40L pathway to increase their immunostimulatory capacity. We extended the APC characterization of CD40L-activated BCP-ALL for their potential use in immunotherapy in a series of 19 patients. Engaging CD40 induced the up-regulation of CCR7 in 7 of 11 patients and then the migration to CCL19 in 2 of 5 patients. As accessory cells, CD40L-activated BCP-ALL induced a strong proliferation response of naive T lymphocytes. Leukemia cells, however, were unable to sustain proliferation over time, and T cells eventually became anergic. After CD40-activation, BCP-ALL cells released substantial amounts of interieukin-1 0 (IL-10) but were unable to produce bioactive IL-12 or to polarize T(H)1 effectors. Interestingly, adding exogenous IL-12 induced the generation of interferon-gamma (IFN-gamma)-secreting T(H)1 effectors and reverted the anergic profile in a secondary response. Therefore, engaging CD40 on BCP-ALL cells is insufficient for the acquisition of full functional properties of immunostimulatory APCs. These results suggest caution against the potential use of CD40L-activated BCP-ALL cells as agents for immunotherapy unless additional stimuli, such as IL-12, are provided.

D'Amico, G., Vulcano, M., Bugarin, C., Bianchi, G., Pirovano, G., Bonamino, M., et al. (2004). CD40 activation of BCP-ALL cells generates 11L-10-producing, 11L-12-defective APCs that induce allogeneic T-cell anergy. BLOOD, 104(3), 744-751 [10.1182/blood-2003-11-3762].

CD40 activation of BCP-ALL cells generates 11L-10-producing, 11L-12-defective APCs that induce allogeneic T-cell anergy

BIAGI, ETTORE;BIONDI, ANDREA
2004

Abstract

The use of leukemia cells as antigen-presenting cells (APCs) in immunotherapy is critically dependent on their capacity to initiate and sustain an antitumor-specific immune response. Previous studies suggested that pediatric B-cell precursor acute lymphoblastic leukemia (BCP-ALL) cells could be manipulated in vitro through the CD40-CD40L pathway to increase their immunostimulatory capacity. We extended the APC characterization of CD40L-activated BCP-ALL for their potential use in immunotherapy in a series of 19 patients. Engaging CD40 induced the up-regulation of CCR7 in 7 of 11 patients and then the migration to CCL19 in 2 of 5 patients. As accessory cells, CD40L-activated BCP-ALL induced a strong proliferation response of naive T lymphocytes. Leukemia cells, however, were unable to sustain proliferation over time, and T cells eventually became anergic. After CD40-activation, BCP-ALL cells released substantial amounts of interieukin-1 0 (IL-10) but were unable to produce bioactive IL-12 or to polarize T(H)1 effectors. Interestingly, adding exogenous IL-12 induced the generation of interferon-gamma (IFN-gamma)-secreting T(H)1 effectors and reverted the anergic profile in a secondary response. Therefore, engaging CD40 on BCP-ALL cells is insufficient for the acquisition of full functional properties of immunostimulatory APCs. These results suggest caution against the potential use of CD40L-activated BCP-ALL cells as agents for immunotherapy unless additional stimuli, such as IL-12, are provided.
Articolo in rivista - Articolo scientifico
CD40L, leukemia, APC
English
2004
104
3
744
751
none
D'Amico, G., Vulcano, M., Bugarin, C., Bianchi, G., Pirovano, G., Bonamino, M., et al. (2004). CD40 activation of BCP-ALL cells generates 11L-10-producing, 11L-12-defective APCs that induce allogeneic T-cell anergy. BLOOD, 104(3), 744-751 [10.1182/blood-2003-11-3762].
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/10281/5224
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