Requirement for NK cells in CD40 ligand-mediated rejection of Philadelphia chromosome-positive acute lymphoblastic leukemia cells

TA Gruber, DC Skelton, DB Kohn - The Journal of Immunology, 2002 - journals.aai.org
TA Gruber, DC Skelton, DB Kohn
The Journal of Immunology, 2002journals.aai.org
We have previously developed a murine model of Philadelphia chromosome-positive acute
lymphoblastic leukemia by iv injection of a pre-B ALL cell line (BM185) derived from Bcr-Abl-
transformed BALB/c bone marrow. We are studying the potential to elicit autologous
antileukemic immune responses by introducing genes encoding immunomodulators (CD40
ligand (CD40L), CD80, and GM-CSF) into leukemia cells. BM185 cells expressing CD40L or
CD80 alone, when injected into BALB/c mice, were rejected in approximately 25% of mice …
Abstract
We have previously developed a murine model of Philadelphia chromosome-positive acute lymphoblastic leukemia by iv injection of a pre-B ALL cell line (BM185) derived from Bcr-Abl-transformed BALB/c bone marrow. We are studying the potential to elicit autologous antileukemic immune responses by introducing genes encoding immunomodulators (CD40 ligand (CD40L), CD80, and GM-CSF) into leukemia cells. BM185 cells expressing CD40L or CD80 alone, when injected into BALB/c mice, were rejected in approximately 25% of mice, whereas cohorts receiving BM185 cells expressing two or more immunomodulator genes rejected challenge 50–76% of the time. The greatest protection was conferred in mice receiving BM185 cells expressing all three immunomodulators. Addition of murine rIL-12 treatments in conjunction with BM185/CD80/CD40L/GM-CSF vaccination allowed rejection of preestablished leukemia. BM185 cell lines expressing CD40L were rejected in BALB/c nu/nu (nude) mice, in contrast to cell lines expressing CD80 and/or GM-CSF. Nude mice depleted of NK cells were no longer protected when challenged with BM185/CD40L, demonstrating a requirement for NK cells. Similarly, NK cell depletion in immunocompetent BALB/c mice resulted in a loss of protection when challenged with BM185/CD40L, confirming the data seen in nude mice. The ability of CD40L to act in a T cell-independent manner may be important for clinical applications in patients with depressed cellular immunity following chemotherapy.
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