4.7 Article

Rapid induction of tumor-specific type 1 T helper cells in metastatic melanoma patients by vaccination with mature, cryopreserved, peptide-loaded monocyte-derived dendritic cells

Journal

JOURNAL OF EXPERIMENTAL MEDICINE
Volume 195, Issue 10, Pages 1279-1288

Publisher

ROCKEFELLER UNIV PRESS
DOI: 10.1084/jem.20012100

Keywords

dendritic cells; vaccination; CD4(+) T cells; T helper cells; tumor immunity

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There is consensus that an optimized cancer vaccine will have to induce not only CD8(+) cytotoxic but also CD4(+) T'helper (Th) cells, particularly interferon (IFN)-gamma-producing, type 1 Th cells. The induction of strong, ex vivo detectable type 1 Th cell responses has not been reported to date. We demonstrate now that the subcutaneous injection of cryopreserved, mature, antigen-loaded, monocyte-derived dendritic cells (DCs) rapidly induces unequivocal Th1 responses (ex vivo detectable IFN-gamma-producing effectors as well as proliferating precursors) both to the control antigen KLH and to major histo compatibility complex (MHC) class II-restricted tumor peptides (melanoma-antigen [Mage]-3.DP4 and Mage-3.DR13) in the majority of 16 evaluable patients with metastatic melanoma. These Th1 cells recognized not only peptides, but also DCs loaded with Mage-3 protein, and in case of Mage-3DP4-specific Th1 cells IFN-gamma was released even after direct recognition of viable, Mage-3-expressing HLA-DP4(+) melanoma cells. The capacity of DCs to rapidly induce Th1 cells should be valuable to evaluate whether Th I cells are instrumental in targeting human cancer and chronic infections.

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