Modulation by IL-2 of CD70 and CD27 expression on CD8+ T cells: importance for the therapeutic effectiveness of cell transfer immunotherapy

J Huang, KW Kerstann, M Ahmadzadeh… - The Journal of …, 2006 - journals.aai.org
J Huang, KW Kerstann, M Ahmadzadeh, YF Li, M El-Gamil, SA Rosenberg, PF Robbins
The Journal of Immunology, 2006journals.aai.org
Proper T cell function relies on the integration of signals delivered by Ag, cytokine, and
costimulatory receptors. In this study, the interactions between IL-2, CD27, and its ligand
CD70 and their effects on human T cell function were examined. Unstimulated CD8+ T cells
expressed relatively low levels of CD70 and high levels of CD27. Incubation in vitro with
high doses of IL-2 (3,000 IU/ml) or administration of IL-2 in vivo resulted in substantial up-
regulation of CD70 expression and the concomitant loss of cell surface CD27 expression on …
Abstract
Proper T cell function relies on the integration of signals delivered by Ag, cytokine, and costimulatory receptors. In this study, the interactions between IL-2, CD27, and its ligand CD70 and their effects on human T cell function were examined. Unstimulated CD8+ T cells expressed relatively low levels of CD70 and high levels of CD27. Incubation in vitro with high doses of IL-2 (3,000 IU/ml) or administration of IL-2 in vivo resulted in substantial up-regulation of CD70 expression and the concomitant loss of cell surface CD27 expression on CD8+ cells. Withdrawal of IL-2 from activated CD8+ T cells that had been maintained in IL-2 resulted in a reversal of the expression of these two markers, whereas reciprocal changes were seen following treatment of PBMCs with IL-2. The proliferation observed in cells stimulated with IL-2 primarily occurred in a subset of the CD70+ CD8+ T cells that up-regulated IL-2 receptor expression but did not occur in CD70− CD8+ T cells. Blocking CD70 resulted in a significant reduction of T cell proliferation induced by high-dose IL-2, indicating that the interaction of CD70 with CD27 played a direct role in T cell activation mediated by IL-2. Finally, studies conducted on tumor-infiltrating lymphocyte (TIL) samples that were administered to melanoma patients indicated that the size of the pool of CD27+ CD8+ T cells in bulk TILs was highly associated (p= 0.004) with the ability of these TILs to mediate tumor regression following adoptive transfer.
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