Interleukin (IL-12) protein has been shown to elicit diverse immunological responses and potent antitumor activity. We demonstrate here that intradermal injection of IL-12 cDNA induces systemic biological effects characteristic of the cytokine in vivo. Intradermal injection of IL-12 cDNA resulted in local expression of IL-12 mRNA, which correlated with a 10-fold increase in natural killer activity and a 3-4-fold increase in anti-CD3-induced IFN-gamma production in cultured splenocytes. Furthermore, when challenged with Renca tumor cells at a distant site, the day of tumor emergence was significantly delayed, and tumor growth was reduced in mice that received IL-12 cDNA, compared to mice given injections of plasmid vector alone. A number of the mice receiving IL-12 cDNA injections remained tumor free months after tumor challenge. In contrast to mice receiving recombinant IL-12 protein, no splenomegaly was detected when natural killer activity was significantly induced in mice receiving injections of IL-12 cDNA. Because purified plasmid DNA is more economical to prepare and has a longer shelf-life than recombinant proteins, and intradermal administration of cDNA encoding IL-12 did not cause splenomegaly, our findings suggest that the in vivo injection of cDNA encoding IL-12 may be a less toxic and more cost-effective alternative to IL-12 protein therapy in some clinical or experimental therapeutic applications.

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