Interleukin-2 gene-modified allogeneic melanoma cell vaccines can induce cross-protection against syngeneic tumors in mice

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Abstract

Vaccination using well-characterized allogeneic tumor cell lines expressing standardized doses of immunostimulatory cytokines is an attractive alternative for autologous gene-transfected tumor cell vaccines. In the present study, we show that vaccination with irradiated allogeneic K1735 (H- 2(k)) or B16F10 (H-2b) melanoma cells induces a moderate degree of cross- protection against the M-3 melanoma (H-2(d)) in DBA/2 mice. Cross-protection against the syngeneic tumor was markedly improved when the allogeneic vaccines were transfected with the interleukin-2 (IL-2) gene. The IL-2 gene- modified allogeneic vaccines were effective for prophylactic vaccination against subsequent tumor challenge and for therapeutic vaccination against pre-existing tumor deposits, with efficacies that were comparable with that of the IL-2 gene-modified syngeneic vaccines. Cross-protection correlated with the cytotoxic activity of splenocytes against M-3 targets. Allogeneic vaccination was not effective in another model, against the B16F10 melanoma in C57BL/6 mice, irrespective of genetic modification with the IL-2 or granulocyte-macrophage colony-stimulating factor genes.

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Kircheis, R., Küpcü, Z., Wallner, G., Rössler, V., Schweighoffer, T., & Wagner, E. (2000). Interleukin-2 gene-modified allogeneic melanoma cell vaccines can induce cross-protection against syngeneic tumors in mice. Cancer Gene Therapy, 7(6), 870–878. https://doi.org/10.1038/sj.cgt.7700183

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