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High-efficiency lysis of cervical cancer by allogeneic NK cells derived from umbilical cord progenitors is independent of HLA status.

Authors :
Veluchamy, John
Heeren, A.
Spanholtz, Jan
Eendenburg, Jaap
Heideman, Daniƫlle
Kenter, Gemma
Verheul, Henk
Vliet, Hans
Jordanova, Ekaterina
Gruijl, Tanja
Source :
Cancer Immunology, Immunotherapy; Jan2017, Vol. 66 Issue 1, p51-61, 11p
Publication Year :
2017

Abstract

Down-regulation of HLA in tumor cells, low numbers and dysfunctionality of NK cells are commonly observed in patients with end-stage cervical cancer. Adoptive transfer of high numbers of cytotoxic NK cells might be a promising treatment approach in this setting. Here, we explored the cytotoxic efficacy on ten cervical cancer cell lines of activated allogeneic NK cells from two sources, i.e., peripheral blood (PBNK) with and without cetuximab (CET), a tumor-specific monoclonal antibody directed against EGFR, or derived from umbilical cord blood (UCB-NK). Whereas CET monotherapy was ineffective against the panel of cervical cancer cell lines, irrespective of their EGFR expression levels and despite their RAS status, it significantly enhanced the in vitro cytotoxic efficacy of activated PBNK ( P = 0.002). Equally superior cytotoxicity over activated PBNK alone was achieved by UCB-NK ( P < 0.001). Both PBNK- and UCB-NK-mediated cytotoxic activity was dependent on the NK-activating receptors natural killer group 2, member D receptor (NKG2D) and DNAX accessory molecule-1 (DNAM-1) ( P < 0.05) and unrelated to expression levels of the inhibitory receptors HLA-E and/or HLA-G. Most strikingly, whereas the PBNK's cytotoxic activity was inversely correlated with HLA-ABC levels ( P = 0.036), PBNK + CET and UCB-NK cytotoxicity were entirely independent of HLA-ABC expression. In conclusion, this study provides a rationale to initiate a clinical trial for cervical cancer with adoptively transferred allogeneic NK cells, employing either UCB-NK or PBNK + CET for EGFR-expressing tumors. Adoptive transfer of UCB-NK might serve as a generally applicable treatment for cervical cancer, enabled by HLA-, histology- and HPV-independent killing mechanisms. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
03407004
Volume :
66
Issue :
1
Database :
Complementary Index
Journal :
Cancer Immunology, Immunotherapy
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
120630028
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1007/s00262-016-1919-1