1. Interleukin-Gene-Transduced Human Melanoma Cells Efficiently Stimulate MHC-Unrestricted and MHC-Restricted Autologous Lymphocytes
- Author
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Cecilia Melani, Mario P. Colombo, Cristina Maccalli, Giorgio Parmiani, Josep Sulé-Suso, Filiberto Belli, Maria Teresa Illeni, Andrea Anichini, Flavio Arienti, and Natale Cascinelli
- Subjects
Interleukin 2 ,biology ,Cell adhesion molecule ,Melanoma ,Human leukocyte antigen ,medicine.disease ,Major histocompatibility complex ,Virology ,Molecular biology ,Viral vector ,Antigen ,Genetics ,medicine ,biology.protein ,Molecular Medicine ,Cytotoxic T cell ,Molecular Biology ,medicine.drug - Abstract
Two human melanoma lines were transduced by a retroviral vector with the gene of the human interleukin-2 (IL-2) and characterized for their immunological properties in comparison with the parental lines. Transduction resulted in the production of biologically active IL-2 in the average amounts of 2,282 and 2,336 pg/ml per 105 cells per 24 hr over 3 and 2 months by the Mel4932/IL-2 and the MelB6/IL-2 lines, respectively. Melanoma-transduced cells lost their tumorigenicity in nude mice. No major changes in the phenotype were observed in IL-2 gene-transduced lines. In fact, more than 90% of cells expressed class I and II(DR) HLA, adhesion molecules, integrins, and melanoma-associated antigens. Irradiation with 100–400 Gy, while inhibiting tumor cell growth in vitro, allowed the release of IL-2 by the transduced cells for at least 5 weeks. The two melanoma lines also maintained susceptibility to lysis by lymphokine-activated killer (LAK) cells and by a HLA-A2-restricted melanoma-specific cytotoxic T ...
- Published
- 1994