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  • Title: Retroviral interleukin-7 gene transfer into human dendritic cells enhances T cell activation.
    Author: Westermann J, Aicher A, Qin Z, Cayeux Z, Daemen K, Blankenstein T, Dörken B, Pezzutto A.
    Journal: Gene Ther; 1998 Feb; 5(2):264-71. PubMed ID: 9578847.
    Abstract:
    Tumor vaccination with dendritic cells (DC) presenting tumor antigens to T cells is a promising approach in immunotherapy. The aim of this study was to enhance T cell stimulatory ability of human DC by retroviral expression of the interleukin-7 (IL-7) gene. IL-7 has been shown to provide a potent costimulatory signal for the proliferation of T cells and the generation of cytotoxic T cells (CTL). DC were generated from human peripheral blood mononuclear cells (PBMC). DC were analyzed by light- and electron-microscopy, immunophenotype (CD1a+, CD14-, CD80+, CD86+, HLA-DR+) and functional assays. According to these criteria, 75-85% of the cells were DC. The cells did not produce measurable amounts of IL-7 spontaneously nor did they express the IL-7 receptor. A retroviral IL-7 expression vector was constructed. Retroviral infection was performed with either the LXSN-hIL-7 vector of its variant LXSN. Using the LXSN-hIL-7 vector, IL-7 production of 2296 pg/10(6) cells/24 h could be achieved on average. Transduction of DC was confirmed by RT-PCR in a CD1a-enriched cell fraction. Transduction efficiency by a control virus coding for beta-galactosidase was about 30%. In autologous mixed lymphocyte reaction (MLR), IL-7 transduced DC augmented T cell proliferation by a factor of two compared with unmodified or mock-transfected DC, and in allogeneic MLR there was a 2.7-fold increase in T cell proliferation. The increase in T cell proliferation could be correlated to IL-7 secretion by DC. Dendritic cells that have been simultaneously peptide-loaded and gene-modified to secrete IL-7 are a potential tool to amplify activation of tumor-specific T cells.
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