Retrovirus-mediated gene transfer into CD4+ and CD8+ human T cell subsets derived from tumor-infiltrating lymphocytes and peripheral blood mononuclear cells

S Morecki, E Karson, K Cornetta, A Kasid… - Cancer Immunology …, 1991 - Springer
S Morecki, E Karson, K Cornetta, A Kasid, P Aebersold, RM Blaese, WF Anderson…
Cancer Immunology, Immunotherapy, 1991Springer
Studies were undertaken to test the susceptibility of individual T cell subpopulations to
retroviral-mediated gene transduction. Gene transfer into human tumor-infiltrating
lymphocytes (TIL) or peripheral blood mononuclear cells (PBMC) was carried out by
transduction with an amphotropic murine retroviral vector (LNL6 or N2) containing the
bacterial neo R gene. The presence of the neo R gene in the TIL population was
demonstrated by Southern blot analysis, detection of the enzymatic activity of the gene …
Summary
Studies were undertaken to test the susceptibility of individual T cell subpopulations to retroviral-mediated gene transduction. Gene transfer into human tumor-infiltrating lymphocytes (TIL) or peripheral blood mononuclear cells (PBMC) was carried out by transduction with an amphotropic murine retroviral vector (LNL6 or N2) containing the bacterialneo R gene. The presence of theneo R gene in the TIL population was demonstrated by Southern blot analysis, detection of the enzymatic activity of the gene product and by the ability of transduced TIL to proliferate in high concentrations of G418, a neomycin analog that is toxic to eukaryotic cells. The presence of theneo R gene in TIL did not alter their proliferation or interleukin-2 dependence compared to nontransduced TIL. The differential susceptibility of CD4+ and CD8+ lymphoid cells to the retro-virus-mediated gene transfer was then tested. Transduction of heterogeneous TIL cultures containing both CD4+ and CD8+ cells resulted in gene insertion into both T cell subsets with no preferential transduction frequency into either CD4+ or CD8+ cells. In other experiments highly purified CD4+ and CD8+ T cell subpopulations from either TIL or PBMC could be successfully transduced with theneo R gene as demonstrated by Southern blot analysis and detection of the gene product neophosphotransferase activity. No such activity or vector DNA could be detected in controls of nontransduced cells. In these highly purified cell subsets the distinctive T cell phenotypic markers were continually expressed after transduction, G418 selection and long-term growth. Clinical trials have begun in patients with advanced cancer using heterogeneous populations of CD4+ and CD8+ gene-modified TIL.
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