By
From the * Ontario Cancer Institute, Department of Medical Biophysics and Department of
Immunology, University of Toronto, Ontario M5G 2M9, Canada; Department of Biochemistry and
Biophysics, University of California, San Francisco, California 94143-0534; and § Institute for
Experimental Immunology, University Hospital of Zürich, CH-8091 Zürich, Switzerland
Induction and maintenance of cytotoxic T lymphocyte (CTL) activity specific for a primary
endogenous tumor was investigated in vivo. The simian virus 40 T antigen (Tag) expressed under the control of the rat insulin promoter (RIP) induced pancreatic -cell tumors producing
insulin, causing progressive hypoglycemia. As an endogenous tumor antigen, the lymphocytic
choriomeningitis virus (LCMV) glycoprotein (GP) was introduced also under the control of
the RIP. No significant spontaneous CTL activation against GP was observed. However,
LCMV infection induced an antitumor CTL response which efficiently reduced the tumor
mass, resulting in temporarily normalized blood glucose levels and prolonged survival of double
transgenic RIP(GP × Tag2) mice (137 ± 18 d) as opposed to control RIP-Tag2 mice (88 ± 8 d).
Surprisingly, the tumor-specific CTL response was not sustained despite the facts that the tumor cells continued to express MHC class I and LCMV-GP-specific CTLs were present and
not tolerized. Subsequent adoptive transfer of virus activated spleen cells into RIP(GP × Tag2)
mice further prolonged survival (168 ± 11 d), demonstrating continued expression of the
LCMV-GP tumor antigen and MHC class I. The data show that the tumor did not spontaneously induce or maintain an activated CTL response, revealing a profound lack of immunogenicity in vivo. Therefore, repetitive immunizations are necessary for prolonged antitumor immunotherapy. In addition, the data suggest that the risk for induction of chronic autoimmune
diseases is limited, which may encourage immunotherapy against antigens selectively but not
exclusively expressed by the tumor.
Tumor-specific cytotoxic T lymphocytes (CTLs) can
prevent or eradicate tumors in a number of experimental systems (1). However, in other models CTLs
failed to control tumor growth, which resembles the situation for most cancer patients. Possible reasons for the lack
of antitumor CTL activity are selection of tumor antigen or
MHC-negative tumor cells (6), defective lymphocyte homing to the tumor (10), lack of immunogenicity and costimulation for CTL activation (11), or functional or
physical absence of tumor antigen-specific CTLs (16). Alternatively, efficient antitumor CTL activity may initially
be induced but subsequently declines. It is of interest to
characterize why tumor immunosurveillance fails so that
antitumor immunotherapy can be improved.
Tumor antigens recognized by CTLs may be encoded
by viral genes or by mutated cellular genes (1). These antigens are foreign to the tumor-bearing host and are thus
tumor specific. However, detailed analyses have shown that
most defined human tumor antigens are tumor selective
but not entirely tumor specific, since physiological expression is also detected in testis, placenta, or melanocytes (17-
19). Since such antigens are expressed only in selected tissues and/or at low levels they may be less accessible for
lymphocytes, but it is still possible that autoimmune disease
may occur if CTLs are activated for therapeutic purposes.
Nonetheless, if tissue-specific self antigens were used as targets for immunotherapy, the development and application
of tumor vaccines might be simplified by targeting the
same protein or major epitopes in different patients. Therefore, it is important to evaluate whether CTL activation
against such antigens results in damage of healthy tissues
and whether this would trigger chronic autoimmune disease.
To assess these questions in an in vivo model, we took
advantage of the simian virus 40 tumor T antigen (Tag)1
which is a potent oncogene, largely due to its ability to inactivate two tumor suppressors, Rb and p53 (20, 21). We
used transgenic mice expressing Tag under the control of
the rat insulin promoter (RIP). The RIP-Tag2 line of
transgenic mice develops pancreatic As a tumor-associated antigen, we introduced the lymphocytic choriomeningitis virus (LCMV) glycoprotein (GP),
also expressed under the control of the RIP (24). Like the
RIP-Tag2 mice (23), these RIP-GP mice do not mount a
spontaneous immune response against the transgenic product. However, in contrast to the RIP-Tag2 mice, there is
no specific T cell tolerance to the transgenic neoantigen. As
a consequence, infection with LCMV activates GP-specific
CTLs which destroy the pancreatic The two transgenic lines were crossed to obtain mice
with Mice and Typing.
C57BL/6 (H-2b) mice were purchased from
The Jackson Laboratory (Bar Harbor, ME). The Tag-transgenic
mouse line RIP-Tag2, originally described as line RIP1-Tag2
(22), was crossed with GP-transgenic mice RIP-GP (24) to obtain RIP(GP × Tag2) double transgenic mice. Mice transgenic
for a V Tumor Monitoring, In Vivo Antitumor Treatment, and Adoptive
Transfer Experiments.
Blood glucose levels were measured from
blood obtained from the tail vein. The Haemogluco Test Kit was
used according to the instructions of the supplier (Boehringer
Mannheim Biochemicals, Indianapolis, IN). Tumor growth and
pancreatic islet cell structure were examined by histology. For the
induction of tumor-specific CTLs, the transgenic mice were immunized i.v. with LCMV Armstrong strain (2 × 105 PFU for
TCR transgenic mice, 2,000 PFU for all other mice). For adoptive transfer experiments, spleen cells from C57BL/6 mice immunized with LCMV Armstrong (2,000 PFU) were collected 8 d
after infection. 5 × 107 spleen cells were injected into the tail
vein of control mice and of RIP(GP × Tag2) with recurrent hypoglycemia.
Proliferation Assays.
Responder spleen cells (105) were cultured with 20 Gy-irradiated stimulator macrophages (2 × 104)
previously incubated with 10 nM LCMV-GP-derived peptide aa
33-41 (p33) recognized by LCMV-GP-specific CTLs. The cultures were maintained in 96-well flat-bottomed microtiter plates
at 37°C in a 5% CO2 humidified atmosphere. IMDM was supplemented with 10% FCS, 5 × 10 Cytotoxicity Tests.
To detect secondary effector activity in
mice analyzed 30 d after LCMV infection, spleen cells (3 × 106/
well) were cocultured with irradiated C57BL/6J stimulator macrophages (3 × 105/well) previously incubated with peptide p33
(10 nM) in complete IMDM at 37°C for 5 d. Effector functions
from untreated mice or 8 d after LCMV infection were tested directly ex vivo. Effector cells were tested in duplicate cultures and
serial dilutions in 96-well round-bottomed plates during 5 h in
51Cr (NEN/DuPont, Boston, MA) release assays using MC57G
fibroblast target cells (H-2b) previously incubated with 10 nM
peptide p33 for 1 h at 37°C. The supernatant of the cytotoxicity
cultures was counted in a Cobra II Gamma Counter (Canberra
Packard, Meriden, CT). Percentage of specific lysis was calculated
as (experimental release Immunohistology.
Freshly removed organs were immersed in
HBSS and snap-frozen in liquid nitrogen. Tissue sections of 5-µm
thickness were cut in a cryostat and fixed in acetone for 10 min.
Sections were then incubated with the primary rat mAbs M1/42
specific for mouse MHC class I (28), YTS 191 specific for CD4,
or YTS 169 specific for CD8 (29) for 30 min at room temperature, followed by a two-step indirect immunoenzymatic staining
procedure. First, alkaline phosphatase-labeled rat-specific goat
immunoglobulins (Tago, Inc., Burlingame, CA) were applied for
30 min at room temperature, followed by alkaline phosphatase-
labeled goat-specific immunoglobulins (Jackson Immunoresearch Labs, Inc., West Grove, PA) for another 30 min. Dilutions were performed in 0.1 M Tris-HCl (pH 7.4) containing 5% normal
mouse serum. Alkaline phosphatase was then detected by a red
color reaction using naphthol AS-BI phosphate and New Fuchsin
as a substrate. Endogenous alkaline phosphatase was blocked by
Levamisol. Sections were counterstained with Mayer's hemalum
for 2 min.
To generate double transgenic RIP(GP × Tag2)
mice, tumor-susceptible RIP-Tag2 mice were crossed with
transgenic RIP-GP mice expressing the LCMV-GP on
pancreatic
It was important to directly
examine the GP-specific T cell responses by the tumor-bearing mice. Spleen cells were stimulated with irradiated
macrophages pulsed with peptide p33, the major epitope of
LCMV-GP in the H-2b haplotype (30). Fig. 2 A (closed
bars) shows that the T cells from untreated RIP-GP, RIP-Tag2, and double transgenic mice did not proliferate significantly. Proliferation could be observed in spleen cells derived from mice transgenic for a GP-specific TCR. Because this assay can easily detect GP-specific memory CTLs from LCMV-immunized C57BL/6 mice (see below), the
results indicated that no efficient spontaneous lymphocyte
activation against the LCMV-GP tumor antigen had occurred in vivo (23, 24).
To activate tumor-specific T cells, mice were immunized i.v. with
LCMV. This was done at the age of 80 d or, in tumor-bearing mice, after two consecutive blood glucose readings
<5 mM. Fig. 1 B shows that early after infection, the single
transgenic RIP-GP mice developed hyperglycemia as seen
in autoimmune diabetes due to The functional LCMV-GP-specific response was also
examined in these animals. Spleen cells taken 8 d after
LCMV infection showed strong in vitro proliferative responses in all the mice (Fig. 2 A, open bars). GP-specific cytolytic T cell activity was measured in 51Cr release assays,
revealing strong cytotoxic responses specific for p33 in all
the mice tested (Fig. 2, B and C). Together, these data
demonstrated that LCMV infection led to efficient functional CTL activation which was associated with specific
regression of those tumors which expressed LCMV-GP.
To further examine tumor burden and the consequences
of the induction of an antiviral/antitumor response, the
pancreata were examined histologically. This confirmed
that the
Systematic comparisons of histological sections confirmed that significant CD8+ cell infiltration was found
only in LCMV-immunized mice where the Table 1.
Effect of Virus Infection on Infiltration of CD8+ Cells,
Tumor Cell Density, and Tumor Size
-cell tumors leading
to progressive autonomous insulin secretion and hypoglycemia, which is lethal when the mice reach the age of 3-4
mo (22). Histological sections show both hyperplasia and
tumor formation by proliferating
cells. The transgenic
mouse line RIP-Tag2 used in this study expresses Tag early
during embryogenesis leading to immune tolerance such
that Tag-specific lymphocytes are not detectable in the T
cell repertoire (16).
cells and induce type
I autoimmune diabetes (24). LCMV is a natural mouse
pathogen which replicates rapidly in vivo. It induces a
strong immune response dominated by LCMV-specific cytotoxic T cells which proliferate to high numbers (~25%
of splenic mononuclear cells). These CTLs are responsible for rapid virus elimination occurring within ~10 d and
give rise to a long-term protective CTL memory (25).
This strong CTL response was well suited for an in vivo
model of tumor immunotherapy.
-islet cell tumors expressing LCMV-GP. The effectiveness of antitumor responses was evaluated by addressing
the following questions in vivo: (a) Are LCMV-GP specific
T cells spontaneously activated in tumor-bearing mice? (b)
Does immunological unresponsiveness to LCMV-GP develop? (c) Do these mice mount a cytotoxic T cell response
after immunization? (d) Will chronic autoimmune disease develop after induction of the tumor-specific LCMV-GP
response? Our data show that the tumor antigen-specific
CTLs were not spontaneously activated but efficiently reduced the tumor mass upon activation by virus infection.
The tumor cells were profoundly incapable of stimulating
an LCMV-GP-specific response in vivo since the antitumor CTL activity was not maintained but declined in parallel with the virus specific response.
2/V
8 TcR specific for H-2Db and the major LCMV
epitope, i.e., the GP-derived peptide aa 33-41 (p33), were generated as described (27) and crossed with the RIP-Tag2 and
RIP(GP × Tag2) transgenic mouse lines. All mice were H-2b;
they were typed for the presence of the transgenes by PCR. The primer sequences and PCR conditions for the RIP-Tag2 transgene were GGACAAACCACAACTAGAATGCAGTG/CAGAGCAGAATTGTGGAGTGG and 60 s/94°C, 60 s/60°C, and
180 s/72°C; and for the RIP-GP transgene they were CAAGCAAGATGTAGAGTCTGCC/GGCTTTGGACATGAACCGCCC and 15 s/94°C, 30 s/53°C, and 30 s/72°C.
5 M 2-mercaptoethanol, penicillin, and streptomycin (complete IMDM). After 3 d, the cultures
were pulsed for 16 h with 1 µCi of [3H]thymidine, harvested,
and counted on a Matrix 96 direct beta counter (Canberra Packard). The data are expressed as mean cpm of triplicate cultures.
spontaneous release)/(total release
spontaneous release) × 100.
Hypoglycemia Due to Insulin Overproduction by -islet Tumor Cells.
cells. To monitor tumor progression, blood
glucose was measured regularly. Pathological hypoglycemia
(i.e., multiple values <5 mM glucose) corresponded with a
large tumor burden since the
-islet tumor cells autonomously released high quantities of insulin (22). This occurred in tumor-bearing RIP-Tag2 and RIP(GP × Tag2)
mice, which both developed hypoglycemia at the age of
70-85 d (Fig. 1 A). As expected, control C57BL/6 and
RIP-GP mice showed normal blood glucose levels. The
RIP(GP × Tag2) mice developed tumors and hypoglycemia with identical kinetics to RIP-Tag2 mice suggesting
that the LCMV-GP specific T cells did not spontaneously
develop tumor protective activity.
Fig. 1.
Blood glucose levels reflect the tumor burden and the effectiveness of tumor immunotherapy in vivo. (A) RIP(GP × Tag2) and RIP-Tag2 mice developed hypoglycemia indicative of -cell hyperplasia and insulin overproduction, while control RIP-GP and C57BL/6 mice showed normal glucose levels. (B) Tag2 transgenic animals with two
consecutive blood glucose readings <5 mM (at an age of 70-85 d) and
age-matched control mice were infected with LCMV to induce tumor-specific CTLs. After infection, the GP-expressing mice (but not those
without GP) increased the blood glucose levels. This effect was reversed
in the RIP(GP × Tag2) mice and hypoglycemia relapsed within 4 wk. In
1 out of 10 RIP(GP × Tag2) mice the LCMV-induced hyperglycemia
was very high and lethal. The figures show 1 mouse/group representative
for 7-20 mice/group (4 mice for C57BL/6).
, RIP-GP;
, RIP(GP × Tag2);
, RIP-Tag2;
, C57BL/6.
[View Larger Version of this Image (28K GIF file)]
Fig. 2.
GP-specific T cells were neither spontaneously activated nor rendered unresponsive by the tumor. (A) LCMV-GP-specific proliferative responses. Spleen cells were taken from untreated mice (closed bars), 8 d after LCMV infection (open bars), or 30 d after LCMV infection (hatched bars) and incubated in vitro with stimulator macrophages treated with the LCMV glycoprotein peptide p33. Data are mean ± SD of triplicate cultures. Control cultures using macrophages without peptide had background levels <3,000 cpm (not shown). (B-E) Normal LCMV-specific cytotoxic responses were
detected 8 d after LCMV infection (B and C), or 30 d after LCMV infection upon restimulation in vitro for 5 d (D and E). In the RIP(GP × Tag2) mice
studied 30 d after LCMV infection the tumors had grown back and blood glucose was low (3-5 mM). No data were obtained for day 30 RIP-GP or
RIP-Tag2 mice (n.d., not determined) because these animals were killed due to diabetes or tumor burden. Target cells were MC57G fibroblasts untreated (C and E) or treated with peptide p33 (B and D). The results shown are representative for three independent experiments and analysis of at least
four mice per group. , RIP-GP;
, RIP(GP × Tag2);
, RIP-Tag2;
, C57BL/6.
[View Larger Versions of these Images (22 + 42K GIF file)]
-cell destruction by the
GP specific CTLs (24). Importantly, the blood glucose levels of the tumor-bearing RIP(GP × Tag2) mice increased
also. This suggested that the CTLs destroyed insulin producing tumor cells and normal
-islet cells. However, hypoglycemia recurred, probably due to the waning of the
LCMV response and the continuous expansion of insulin-producing tumor cells. The control mice not expressing
GP in their islets remained normoglycemic (C57BL/6) or
showed progressive hypoglycemia due to insulin production by the
-cell tumor (RIP-Tag2) which was similar to
that in uninfected mice (not shown).
cell tumors in single transgenic RIP-Tag2 mice
were not affected by the LCMV infection. In contrast, in
RIP(GP × Tag2) mice pancreatic
-islets were infiltrated
with inflammatory cells including CTLs at maximal levels
8 d after infection, leading to tumor mass reduction and increased blood glucose levels. Fig. 3 shows that the tumors
in RIP(GP × Tag2) transgenic mice were infiltrated by
numerous CD8+ and many CD4+ lymphocytes, whereas
the tumors in RIP-Tag2 mice had only limited lymphocyte infiltration. These findings correlated with the in vitro
results (Fig. 2) of minimal spontaneous lymphocyte responses in uninfected tumor-bearing mice but very strong
CTL activity upon viral immunization. Thus, the tumor-specific CTLs were efficiently activated by LCMV infection but not by the tumor.
Fig. 3.
Intense lymphocytic infiltration after LCMV infection in double transgenic RIP(GP × Tag2) but not in RIP-Tag2 single transgenic mice.
Mice were immunized with LCMV i.v. and killed on day 8 (A-F). Tag transgenic mice showed islet hyperplasia and tumor formation by proliferating cells (C-H). Immunohistochemical analysis with CD8-specific (left) or CD4-specific (right) antibodies showed intense lymphocytic infiltration in the tumors of RIP-GP × Tag2 (E and F) but not RIP-Tag2 (C and D) mice or nontransgenic mice (A and B). In uninfected mice (G and H), the tumors
showed minimal lymphocyte infiltration (only RIP-GP × Tag2 shown).
[View Larger Version of this Image (127K GIF file)]
-islet cells expressed the GP (Table 1). Interestingly, the lymphocytic
infiltrations in small
-cell hyperplasias and large tumors
were of similar intensity (data not shown), indicating that
even advanced tumors remained susceptible to CTLs. Morphometric analysis of pancreas sections further revealed that
the insulinomas in LCMV-treated RIP(GP × Tag2) mice
had many regions with relatively low density of viable tumor cells. Finally, the insulinomas in LCMV-infected
RIP(GP × Tag2) mice were significantly smaller than in
RIP-Tag2 mice or in uninfected controls. These data confirmed that LCMV-activated CTLs directly destroyed GP
expressing tumor cells and reduced tumor mass.
RIP
(GP × Tag2)
P
RIP-Tag2
8 d after LCMV infection
CD8+ cell
infiltration (%)
39.13 ± 8.5
<0.0001
2.59 ± 2.40
Tumor cell
density (%)
71.25 ± 10.7
<0.001
92.65 ± 4.39
Tumor size (mm2)
0.25 ± 0.07
0.002
0.46 ± 0.46
Uninfected
CD8+ cell
infiltration (%)
3.88 ± 1.90
NS
2.11 ± 1.66
Tumor cell
density (%)
94.13 ± 4.01
NS
95.11 ± 2.42
Tumor size (mm2)
0.51 ± 0.29
NS
0.64 ± 0.20
Morphometric histological analysis: CD8+ cell infiltration indicates the
percentage of insulinoma square zones (100 × 100 µm each) containing CD8+ cells in relation to the total of square zones (20) analyzed per mouse pancreas. Tumor cell density indicates the percentage of areas consisting of viable tumor cells in relation to the total area per individual sample square zone. Tumor size is estimated from measuring the
size of the area covered by each insulinoma. Data are mean ± SD from
four mice per group, analyzed using one to three nonadjacent pancreas
sections revealing four to six insulinomas per mouse. Each insulinoma
was analyzed by arbitrarily placing five sample square zones of 100 × 100 µm each. At the time of necropsy, all mice were 79-90 d old. The upper part of the table shows data from mice that had been infected with
2,000 PFU LCMV i.v. 8 d earlier, and the lower part shows data from
untreated mice. NS, i.e., P >0.05.
To evaluate whether the CTL-mediated tumor destruction was of extended therapeutic value, we monitored disease progression and survival. All mice were infected with LCMV after two consecutive blood glucose readings <5 mM. Tumor-bearing RIP-Tag2 mice had a mean life expectancy of 88 ± 8 d (Table 2), similar to uninfected RIP-Tag2 and RIP(GP × Tag2) mice (not shown). However, LCMV infection of RIP(GP × Tag2) mice lead to a significant increase in survival with a mean of 137 ± 18 d (P <0.001). Thus, a single acute LCMV infection with its known short duration of ~10 d (25) prolonged survival considerably, demonstrating the intense immune response elicited by LCMV and the potential for tumor immunotherapy.
|
We crossed the RIP(GP × Tag2) mice with mice transgenic for an LCMV-GP-specific TCR to investigate whether
a high frequency of tumor-specific CTLs would increase
the efficiency of virus-mediated antitumor therapy. Indeed,
the survival of LCMV-infected triple transgenic TCR
RIP(GP × Tag2) mice was much longer as compared to
the survival of TCR RIP-Tag2 mice (Table 2). Thus, the
TCR transgenic mice showed an even greater prolongation
of survival due to more efficient CTL-mediated tumor destruction. These data show that virus-induced CTL-mediated immunotherapy significantly controlled pancreatic -cell
tumor progression. Ultimately, the tumor-bearing mice
nevertheless succumbed to lethal hypoglycemia, demonstrating that a single virus challenge did not trigger a chronic
antitumor response and permanent CTL activity.
We investigated whether the GP-specific CTLs had been functionally or physically eliminated during or after infection because of the presence of the GP-expressing tumors. Spleen cells from immunized RIP(GP × Tag2), control C57BL/6, or control TCR transgenic mice obtained 30 d after in vivo infection proliferated normally upon GP-specific in vitro stimulation with peptide p33-treated macrophages (Fig. 2 A, hatched bars). After 5 d of such in vitro stimulation, a normal peptide-specific cytotoxic response was also detected (Fig. 2, D and E). These data show that tumor antigen-specific CTLs functioned normally and were not tolerized in vivo.
Continued Tumor Susceptibility to CTL-mediated Immunotherapy.We examined other parameters which may have limited the antitumor therapy in the RIP(GP × Tag2) mice. Immunohistological sections from pancreas revealed positive staining for MHC class I expression in tumors from RIP(GP × Tag2) mice 30 d after LCMV infection (data not shown), suggesting that the tumor cells did not downregulate MHC class I. But did the tumors also continue to present the cognate peptide? We performed functional experiments to determine whether those tumor cells which had survived a previous immunotherapy would remain susceptible to tumor antigen-specific CTLs. Spleen cells from LCMV immune C57BL/6 mice were adoptively transferred into RIP(GP × Tag2) mice which had been immunized previously with LCMV and had redeveloped hypoglycemia. As shown in Table 2, this additional treatment significantly (P <0.005) prolonged the survival with a mean of 168 ± 11 d as compared to mice that had only been immunized once with LCMV (137 ± 18 d). Therefore, the tumor cells had not developed secondary immune escape mechanisms but remained susceptible to CTL-mediated immunotherapy.
Most models which examine tumor immunity are based on
transplanted syngeneic tumors. However, primary tumors
which naturally develop and grow in vivo are likely to represent more realistic models for human cancers. Using the
latter approach, this study was designed to examine the potential for efficient tumor immunotherapy in vivo. No
spontaneous tumor regression was detectable despite the
presence of LCMV-GP-specific CTLs and LCMV-GP expressed by tumor cells. However, virus infection induced
tumor-specific CTLs infiltrating small and even large -cell
tumors and mediating efficient immunotherapy with significantly prolonged survival of tumor-bearing mice. Nevertheless, after viral clearance, the CTLs were no longer active and no chronic autoimmune diabetes was induced
despite continuous expression of antigen/MHC by the tumor and persistence of functional tumor-specific CTLs.
This experimental model thus demonstrates an efficient tumor therapy (by virus infection) capable of treating established primary tumors. However, the tumors themselves
were profoundly nonimmunogenic, since they could not
activate T cells or maintain an activated T cell response.
The data show that the tumors behaved similarly to normal
nonlymphoid peripheral tissues which fail to activate immune responses despite the existence of self-specific CTLs
(24, 31).
These results relate to several important issues for tumor immunotherapy: (a) Why are peripheral epithelial, neurectodermal or mesenchymal tumors antigenic but fail to induce an immune response? Are they ignored by T cells or do they anergize or tolerize T cells? (b) How can an antitumor T cell response be maintained to effectively control tumors? (c) Will the T cell response cause chronic autoimmune disease?
(a) Immunogenicity Versus Antigenicity of Peripheral Tumors.That tumors are often antigenic but not immunogenic has been recognized for many years (32). More
recently, the detailed analysis of the so called tum variants
obtained by in vitro treatment with mutagens revealed that
mice which had rejected tum
variants were significantly
protected against a challenge with the original tumor (11,
12). This indicated that the latter was antigen positive.
Since then it has been shown that many tumors express antigens which may be recognized by CTLs, and thus display the necessary targets for potential immunotherapy.
Several mechanisms may contribute to the failure of tumor immunosurveillance. Models have demonstrated that downregulation of peptide/MHC expression (6), lack of costimulation (11), the induction of lymphocyte unresponsiveness (16), local fibrin formation or alterations in the glycocalyx, or changes in homing receptor expression (10) may all contribute to tumor evasion from the immune system. In our model, virus infection and/or adoptive transfer of virus-activated lymphocytes remained an efficient means to counteract tumor expansion in vivo. Thus, there was no obvious tolerization of tumor-specific CTLs, and the tumors have not actively escaped immunosurveillance. Although we cannot entirely exclude the possibility that some of the above mentioned escape mechanisms have occurred to some degree in our model, it is evident that such mechanisms were not dominant. Rather, the lack of immunogenicity of tumor cells was the major feature with respect to the failure of immunosurveillance.
In vivo, adequate spontaneous activation of tumor specific lymphocytes either does not occur or often results in inefficient tumor protection. This is in part because the tumor cell itself is not a professional antigen-presenting cell and therefore is relatively inefficient at activating tumor-specific effector cells. Previous studies have shown that if a tumor cell or nonprofessional antigen-presenting cell reaches secondary lymphoid organs, measurable cytotoxic T cell responses are nevertheless induced against epithelial and mesenchymal malignancies. Thus, whether or not a T cell immune response is induced is related to the physiological location of the tumor itself (32, 36). In many cases, the tumor is not in an environment which enhances an antitumor response, or tumor metastasis to organized lymphatic tissues occurs too late to induce an effective antitumor response in vivo.
Recognition of antigen by naive T cells in the absence of costimulation has been postulated to induce T cell unresponsiveness. Since most carcinomas do not express costimulatory molecules, it has been suggested that tumor therapy may only be feasible in patients with recent onset cancers, whereas in advanced disease all the tumor-specific T cells will have become unresponsive (4). However, our data do not support this notion since they show that tumors may progress without significantly altering tumor-specific T cell responsiveness. This is in parallel to antigens of healthy tissues that neither induce immunological tolerance nor immune responses but remain invisible for T cells (24, 31). Thus, carcinomas and sarcomas, similar to solid tissue antigens which do not reach secondary lymphoid organs, may be ignored by T cells. Appropriate immunization could therefore induce an efficient T cell immunity against such tumor antigens even after extended periods of tumor burden.
(b) Maintenance of an Antitumor T Cell Response.Our data indicate that the lack of tumor immunogenicity may be more profound than previously suspected, since the tumor was not even sufficiently immunogenic to maintain an activated and ongoing strong immune response. Despite persistence of functionally competent specific CTLs and of antigen-expressing tumor cells, the CTL effector function declined. This result indicates that antigen must be presented in an immunogenic form not only for induction but also for maintenance of T cell responses, including protective T cell memory. The fact that the CTL effector function was not sustained by the tumor is a novel finding, which has important implications for immunotherapy. It indicates that repetitive vaccination or adoptive transfer of activated tumor-specific CTL is necessary to sustain antitumor activity in cancer patients.
(c) Antitumor Immunity and Autoimmune Disease.Damage to
healthy organs may be acceptable to some extent, as widely
illustrated by many radiation and chemotherapeutic techniques which are partially but not highly specific for tumor
tissues. However, in the case of immunotherapy specific for
tumor antigens which are also expressed by some healthy
tissues, there is the possibility of inducing uncontrolled and
progressive chronic autoimmune disease. It has been demonstrated that the lymphocytes from patients with vitiligo
may be activated against tyrosinase and other melanocyte-specific antigens (37) and that spontaneous appearance
of vitiligo in persons with metastatic melanoma was associated with improved prognosis (40, 41). Discrete and limited damage of normal skin has recently also been demonstrated experimentally where passive immunization with
antibodies directed against the melanocyte differentiation
antigen gp75 (tyrosinase-related protein 1) was successfully
used to treat melanomas in mice (42). Both clinical and experimental evidence suggests that the damage of healthy tissues remains limited despite effective antitumor immune
activity (37). In our model, not only tumor cells but
also normal cells were targets for CTLs (24), and it is
possible that tumor cells compensated for reduced insulin
production by normal
cells. As can be expected from the
sharing of a specific antigen by tumor and normal cells, the CTL
cytotoxicity was not tumor specific. However, the important finding was that the CTL activity was limited in time.
Thus, although reactivity to healthy tissue may be difficult to avoid, there was no development of progressive chronic
autoimmune disease. These data indicate that CTL activity
can be controlled by the intervals and intensity of the applied
immunization procedures.
We conclude that solid tumors may not be sufficiently immunogenic either to initiate or to maintain a beneficial or therapeutic immune response. Therefore, efficient tumor surveillance must include both improved and accelerated induction by using vaccines localizing tumor antigens to secondary lymphoid organs and booster immunizations to sustain the antitumor effect. Antigens selectively but not exclusively expressed by the tumor may be considered targets for antitumor CTL therapy, since CTL activity is limited in time and thus induction of chronic autoimmune disease is unlikely.
Address correspondence to Daniel E. Speiser, Ontario Cancer Institute, Departments of Medical Biophysics and Immunology, University of Toronto, 610 University Avenue, Toronto, Ontario M5G 2M9, Canada. Phone: 416-946-4501, extension 5470. FAX: 416-946-2086.
Received for publication 18 February 1997 and in revised form 25 June 1997.
1 Abbreviations used in this paper: GP, glycoprotein; LCMV, lymphocytic choriomeningitis virus; RIP, rat insulin promoter; Tag, T antigen.We would like to thank Ming Tsao for his help with histology and Drs. Maurice Zauderer and Ruth Ganss for comments to the manuscript.
This work was supported by the Medical Research Council (MRC) of Canada and the Canadian Diabetes Association. P.S. Ohashi is supported by an MRC scholarship.
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