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Overexpression of CCL-21/Secondary Lymphoid Tissue Chemokine in Human Dendritic Cells Augments Chemotactic Activities for Lymphocytes and Antigen Presenting Cells

Authors :
Riedl, Karen
Baratelli, Felicita
Batra, Raj K
Yang, Seok Chul
Luo, Jie
Escuadro, Brian
Figlin, Robert
Strieter, Robert
Sharma, Sherven
Dubinett, Steven
Source :
Molecular Cancer, Vol 2, Iss 1, p 35 (2003), Molecular Cancer
Publication Year :
2003
Publisher :
BMC, 2003.

Abstract

Background Ex vivo generated dendritic cells (DC) genetically modified to express secondary lymphoid tissue chemokine (CCL-21/SLC) have been shown to stimulate potent antitumor responses in murine models. When injected intratumorally, CCL-21 colocalizes DC and lymphocyte effector cells at the tumor site. This may improve tumor antigen presentation and T cell activation by utilizing the tumor as an in vivo source of antigen for DC. In order to develop DC-based cancer therapies for intratumoral injection that could promote tumor antigen uptake and presentation in situ, we constructed and characterized an adenoviral vector that expresses human CCL-21 (AdCCL-21). Results Human monocyte derived DC were cultured in GM-CSF and IL-4 for 6 days. Following AdCCL-21 transduction, CCL-21 protein production was assessed by ELISA on day 8. DC transduced with AdCCL-21 at multiplicities of infection (MOIs) of 50:1 or 100:1 produced up to 210 ± 9 ng/ml and 278 ± 6.5 ng/ml /106 cells/48 hours, respectively. Following transduction, an immature DC phenotype was maintained and an upregulation of the costimulatory molecule, CD86 was noted. In addition, supernatant from AdCCL-21-DC caused significant chemotaxis of peripheral blood lymphocytes and mature DC. Conclusions These studies demonstrate that AdCCL-21-DC generate functional levels of CCL-21 without adversely altering DC phenotype. These findings strengthen the rationale for further investigation of AdCCL-21-DC as a DC-based therapy in cancer treatment.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
14764598
Volume :
2
Issue :
1
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Molecular Cancer
Accession number :
edsair.pmid.dedup....eabaffbe58783ca3d4333241c38de094