Abstract

Donor lymphocyte infusion mediates most effective graft- versus-leukemia (GVL) effects following induction of host-versus-graft tolerance by transplantation of donor stem cells. This study was designed to maximize GVL effects across both major (MHC) and minor (mHgs) histocompatibility barriers in recipients inoculated with murine B-cell leukemia (BCL1), using specifically immune donor lymphocytes. GVL effects were induced with donor spleen cells from mice immunized across MHC or mHgs barriers with BCL/1 cells or normal BALB/c spleen cells. Our data suggest that spleen cells from donor mice immunized against murine B-cell leukemia of BALB/c origin, or to a lesser extent against normal host alloantigens, induce better therapeutic GVL effects with less great-versus-host disease (GVHD) across both mHgs and MHC. The cytokine profile of effector cells inducing predominantly GVL effects with reduced GVHD across MHC and mHg barriers consisted preferentially of upregulated IFN-gamma, IL-2, IL-10 and IL-12 in donors, implying a Th-1 to Th-2 cytokine shift. We hypothesize that immunotherapy with immune donor lymphocytes sensitized in vivo or in vitro with allogeneic tumor cells or normal host cells together with allogeneic BMT may provide an effective approach for amplifying GVL effects, while reducing procedure-related morbidity and mortality due to uncontrolled GVHD.

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