SUMMARY: Cell therapy with allogeneic donor cells mismatched for minor histocompatible (MiHC) antigens was applied to a murine mammary carcinoma (4T1) model to test the feasibility of graft versus tumor (GVT) effect against metastatic epithelial tumor cells. BALB/c mice bearing a 4T1 tumor of BALB/c origin were given syngeneic or MiHC-mismatched splenocytes. GVT effects were determined in secondary recipients of adoptively transferred lung cells derived from primary hosts who had previously been inoculated intravenously with 4T1 cells, and injected with one of the following: 1) naive BALB/c splenocytes, 2) naive DBA/2 splenocytes, 3) 4T1-immune DBA/2 splenocytes, or 4) DBA/2 splenocytes immunized with host-derived BABL/c spleen cells. Naive DBA/2 splenocytes inhibited tumor growth only slightly and only slightly prolonged the survival of secondary recipients, in comparison with fully matched tumor/host BALB/c spleen cells. An efficient GVT reaction was demonstrated in vitro and in vivo with MiHC-mismatched DBA/2 splenocytes from mice presensitized by multiple injections of irradiated tumor or BALB/c-derived spleen cells. All 30 mice adoptively inoculated with lung cells from primary hosts that had previously been treated with these presensitized effector cells were tumor free for >250 days. Secondary recipients inoculated with lung cells from mice given naive BALB/c or DBA/2 spleen cells died of metastatic tumors within 33 to 46 days. These results suggest that preimmunized donor cells represent an effective tool against metastatic disease; hence, the next goal should be to control graft-versus-host disease while exploiting the GVT potential.
Download full-text PDF |
Source |
---|
Enter search terms and have AI summaries delivered each week - change queries or unsubscribe any time!