Induced Expression of B7-1 on Myeloma Cells Following Retroviral Gene Transfer Results in Tumor-Specific Recognition by Cytotoxic T Cells

  • Tarte K
  • Zhang X
  • Legouffe E
  • et al.
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Abstract

The aim of this study was to evaluate whether tumor cells from patients with multiple myeloma activate allogeneic and autologous T cells. Results showed that myeloma cells expressed few B7-2 and no B7-1 in six cell lines and primary cells from 11 patients. They expressed substantial levels of HLA class I, CD40, and a set of adhesion molecules. In accordance with the low density of B7 molecules on these cells, they were poor allogeneic CD8+ T cell stimulators. Neither IFN-γ plus TNF-α nor CD40 stimulation significantly induced B7-1 or up-regulated B7-2 on human myeloma cell line or primary myeloma cells from six of seven patients. However, such induction was found on autologous bone-marrow nontumoral cells and on autologous dendritic cells following CD40 stimulation. High B7-1 expression was stably obtained on human myeloma cell line using transduction with a B7-1 retrovirus, enabling these cells to stimulate allogeneic CD8+, though not CD4+, T cell proliferation. For one patient with advanced disease, B7-1 gene transfer made it possible to amplify autologous cytotoxic T cells that killed autologous myeloma cells in an HLA class I-restricted manner, but not autologous PHA blasts. These results suggest that B7-1 gene transfer could be a promising immunotherapeutic approach in multiple myeloma.

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APA

Tarte, K., Zhang, X.-G., Legouffe, E., Hertog, C., Mehtali, M., Rossi, J.-F., & Klein, B. (1999). Induced Expression of B7-1 on Myeloma Cells Following Retroviral Gene Transfer Results in Tumor-Specific Recognition by Cytotoxic T Cells. The Journal of Immunology, 163(1), 514–524. https://doi.org/10.4049/jimmunol.163.1.514

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