Type 2 Bias of T cells expanded from the blood of melanoma patients switched to type 1 by IL-12p70 mRNA-transfected dendritic cells

PMID: 19010919
Journal: Cancer research (volume: 68, issue: 22, Cancer Res. 2008 Nov;68(22):9441-50)
Published: 2008-11-15

Authors:
Minkis K, Kavanagh DG, Alter G, Bogunovic D, O’Neill D, Adams S, Pavlick A, Walker BD, Brockman MA, Gandhi RT, Bhardwaj N

ABSTRACT

Melanoma patients may exhibit a T(H)2-skewed cytokine profile within blood and tumor-infiltrating lymphocytes. Therapies that induce beneficial T(H)1-type tumor-specific immune responses, therefore, are highly desirable. Dendritic cells (DC) are widely used as immune adjuvants for cancer. Before their administration, DC are generally induced to mature with a cocktail of recombinant cytokines [interleukin (IL)-1beta, tumor necrosis factor alpha, and IL-6] and prostaglandin E(2) (PGE(2)), which is added to preserve the ability of DC to migrate to draining lymph nodes. However, PGE(2) suppresses the production of IL-12p70, a cytokine essential for differentiation of T(H)1 responses. In this study, human DC were transfected with IL-12p70 mRNA and tested for their ability to alter the T(H)2 type bias manifested by blood T cells of patients with melanoma. Transfected DC secreted high levels of bioactive IL-12p70, as indicated by their capacity to enhance natural killer cell activity, skew T(H)1 responses in allogeneic mixed lymphocyte reactions through reduction of IL-4 and IL-5, and prime CD8(+) T cells to the melanoma-associated antigen Melan A/MART-1. Furthermore, T-cell lines primed in vitro from the blood of melanoma patients showed strong type 2 skewing that was dramatically reversed by IL-12p70 transfection of autologous DC. Thus, IL-12p70 transfection of clinical DC preparations may enhance type 1 antitumor responses and may thereby contribute to effective immune-based therapy.