4.6 Article

IL-12 Enhances the Antitumor Actions of Trastuzumab via NK Cell IFN-γ Production

Journal

JOURNAL OF IMMUNOLOGY
Volume 186, Issue 6, Pages 3401-3409

Publisher

AMER ASSOC IMMUNOLOGISTS
DOI: 10.4049/jimmunol.1000328

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Funding

  1. National Institutes of Health [P01 CA95426, K24 CA93670, T32 CA90338-27, T32 GM068412, P30 CA16058]

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The antitumor effects of therapeutic mAbs may depend on immune effector cells that express FcRs for IgG. IL-12 is a cytokine that stimulates IFN-gamma production from NK cells and T cells. We hypothesized that coadministration of IL-12 with a murine anti-HER2/neu mAb (4D5) would enhance the FcR-dependent immune mechanisms that contribute to its antitumor activity. Thrice-weekly therapy with IL-12 (1 mu g) and 4D5 (1 mg/kg) significantly suppressed the growth of a murine colon adenocarcinoma that was engineered to express human HER2 (CT-26(HER2/neu)) in BALB/c mice compared with the result of therapy with IL-12, 4D5, or PBS alone. Combination therapy was associated with increased circulating levels of IFN-gamma, monokine induced by IFN-gamma, and RANTES. Experiments with IFN-gamma-deficient mice demonstrated that this cytokine was necessary for the observed antitumor effects of therapy with IL-12 plus 4D5. Immune cell depletion experiments showed that NK cells (but not CD4(+) or CD8(+) T cells) mediated the antitumor effects of this treatment combination. Therapy of HER2/neu-positive tumors with trastuzumab plus IL-12 induced tumor necrosis but did not affect tumor proliferation, apoptosis, vascularity, or lymphocyte infiltration. In vitro experiments with CT-26(HER2/neu) tumor cells revealed that IFN-gamma induced an intracellular signal but did not inhibit cellular proliferation or induce apoptosis. Taken together, these data suggest that tumor regression in response to trastuzumab plus IL-12 is mediated through NK cell IFN-gamma production and provide a rationale for the coadministration of NK cell-activating cytokines with therapeutic mAbs. The Journal of Immunology, 2011, 186: 3401-3409.

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