To broaden the applicability of adoptive T cell therapy to cancer types for which tumor-specific T cells cannot routinely be isolated, an effort has been made to develop the transfer of tumor-specific TCR genes into autologous T cells as a novel immunotherapeutic approach. Although such TCR-modified T cells have been shown to react to Ag encounter and can be used to break tolerance to defined self-Ags, the persistence and capacity for renewed expansion of TCR-modified T cells has not been analyzed. To establish whether TCR-transduced T cells can provide recipients with long-term Ag-specific immune protection, we analyzed long-term function of TCR transduced T cells in mouse model systems. We demonstrate that polyclonal populations of T cells transduced with a class I restricted OVA-specific TCR are able to persist in vivo and respond upon re-encounter of cognate Ag as assessed by both proliferation and cytolytic capacity. These experiments indicate that TCR gene transfer can be used to generate long-term Ag-specific T cell responses and provide a useful model system to assess the factors that can promote high-level persistence of TCR-modified T cells.
CITATION STYLE
Coccoris, M., Swart, E., de Witte, M. A., van Heijst, J. W. J., Haanen, J. B. A. G., Schepers, K., & Schumacher, T. N. M. (2008). Long-Term Functionality of TCR-Transduced T Cells In Vivo. The Journal of Immunology, 180(10), 6536–6543. https://doi.org/10.4049/jimmunol.180.10.6536
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