Fusions of Human Ovarian Carcinoma Cells with Autologous or Allogeneic Dendritic Cells Induce Antitumor Immunity

  • Gong J
  • Nikrui N
  • Chen D
  • et al.
210Citations
Citations of this article
28Readers
Mendeley users who have this article in their library.

Abstract

Human ovarian carcinomas express the CA-125, HER2/neu, and MUC1 tumor-associated Ags as potential targets for the induction of active specific immunotherapy. In the present studies, human ovarian cancer cells were fused to human dendritic cells (DC) as an alternative strategy to induce immunity against known and unidentified tumor Ags. Fusions of ovarian cancer cells to autologous DC resulted in the formation of heterokaryons that express the CA-125 Ag and DC-derived costimulatory and adhesion molecules. Similar findings were obtained with ovarian cancer cells fused to allogeneic DC. The fusion cells were functional in stimulating the proliferation of autologous T cells. The results also demonstrate that fusions of ovarian cancer cells to autologous or allogeneic DC induce cytolytic T cell activity and lysis of autologous tumor cells by a MHC class I-restricted mechanism. These findings demonstrate that fusions of ovarian carcinoma cells and DC activate T cell responses against autologous tumor and that the fusions are functional when generated with either autologous or allogeneic DC.

Cite

CITATION STYLE

APA

Gong, J., Nikrui, N., Chen, D., Koido, S., Wu, Z., Tanaka, Y., … Kufe, D. (2000). Fusions of Human Ovarian Carcinoma Cells with Autologous or Allogeneic Dendritic Cells Induce Antitumor Immunity. The Journal of Immunology, 165(3), 1705–1711. https://doi.org/10.4049/jimmunol.165.3.1705

Register to see more suggestions

Mendeley helps you to discover research relevant for your work.

Already have an account?

Save time finding and organizing research with Mendeley

Sign up for free