CD8 T cell help for innate antitumor immunity

A Shanker, G Verdeil, M Buferne… - The Journal of …, 2007 - journals.aai.org
A Shanker, G Verdeil, M Buferne, EM Inderberg-Suso, D Puthier, F Joly, C Nguyen…
The Journal of Immunology, 2007journals.aai.org
Innate immunity is considered to initiate adaptive antitumor responses. We demonstrate that
monoclonal CD8 T lymphocytes reactive to tumor Ag P1A on P815 mastocytoma cells
provide essential “help” to NK cells for rejection of P1A-deficient tumors. RAG-deficient mice
have normal NK cells but do not reject either tumor. Reconstitution of these mice with P1A-
specific T cells conferred resistance to both P1A-expressing and-deficient tumor cells
provided they were present at the same site. Elimination of Ag-negative tumor variants …
Abstract
Innate immunity is considered to initiate adaptive antitumor responses. We demonstrate that monoclonal CD8 T lymphocytes reactive to tumor Ag P1A on P815 mastocytoma cells provide essential “help” to NK cells for rejection of P1A-deficient tumors. RAG-deficient mice have normal NK cells but do not reject either tumor. Reconstitution of these mice with P1A-specific T cells conferred resistance to both P1A-expressing and-deficient tumor cells provided they were present at the same site. Elimination of Ag-negative tumor variants required both activated T and NK cells. Gene expression profiling of NK cells infiltrating P1A-positive tumors in mice with specific CD8 T cells demonstrated an activated effector phenotype. However, CD8 T cell help to NK cells appeared ineffective for P1A-negative variants separated from the P1A-positive tumor. Local tumor Ag-specific T cell-NK cell collaboration results in the elimination of tumor cells whether they express or not the T cell tumor Ag epitope, thus containing the emergence of tumor escape variants before metastasis.
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