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MICA/NKG2D-mediated
immunogene therapy of experimental gliomas
Friese MA, Platten M, Lutz SZ, Naumann U, Aulwurm S, Bischof F, Buhring HJ,
Dichgans J, Rammensee HG, Steinle A, Weller M
Department of Neurology, University of Tubingen, Tubingen,
Germany.
The failure of conventional cancer therapy renders glioblastoma an attractive
target for immunotherapy.
Tumor cells expressing ligands of the activating immunoreceptor NKG2D stimulate
tumor immunity mediated by natural killer (NK), gammadelta T, and CD8(+) T
cells.
We report that human glioma cells express the NKG2D ligands MICA, MICB, and
members of the UL16-binding protein family constitutively.
However, glioma cells resist NK cell cytolysis because of high MHC class I
antigen expression.
Plasmid-mediated or adenovirus-mediated overexpression of MICA in glioma cells
enhances their sensitivity to NK and T-cell responses in vitro and markedly
delays the growth of s.c. and intracerebral LN-229 human glioma cell xenografts
in nude mice and of SMA-560 gliomas in syngeneic VMDk mice.
Glioma cells forming progressive tumors after implantation of stably
MICA-transfected human LN-229 cells lost MICA expression, indicating a strong
selection against MICA expression in vivo.
Rejection of MICA-expressing SMA-560 cells in VMDk mice resulted in protective
immunity to a subsequent challenge with wild-type tumor cells.
Finally, the growth of syngeneic intracerebral SMA-560 tumors is inhibited by
peripheral vaccination with adenovirus-mediated, MICA-infected irradiated tumor
cells, and vaccination results in immune cell activation in the NK and T-cell
compartments in vivo.
These data commend MICA immunogene therapy as a novel experimental treatment for
human malignant gliomas.
PMID: 14695218 [PubMed - in process]
Source: http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/entrez/query.fcgi?cmd=Retrieve&db=PubMed&list_uids=14695218&dopt=Abstract
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