Abstract

To attain one of the final goals for cancer immunotherapy, cytotoxic T lymphocyte (CTL) clones were selected on the basis of exogenous IL-2 independence after limiting dilution culture from mixed lymphocyte tumor cell culture cells of FBL-3 tumor-immune spleens. About 10% of the clones could be propagated up to >5 times by weekly passages in the presence of splenic feeder and stimulating tumor cells. Two of the representative FBL-3-specific CTL clones that were able to undergo the fifth passage were expanded in large numbers for adoptive transfer by two rounds of a weekly passage with medium containing IL-2. FBL-3-specific CTL clones thus obtained showed a strong ability to eliminate the established tumors when transferred into tumor-bearing nude mice. In addition, the cells were recovered from the mouse spleen even 8 months after the transfer. The most striking differences between the CTL clones used in this experiment and those maintained conventionally in the presence of IL-2 were the abilities to produce IL-2 by themselves and the high expression level of the integrin molecule, VLA-4, that disappeared when cultured completely in the continuous presence of IL-2 in vitro during 12 weeks. In addition, concomitant with the disappearance of exogenous IL-2 independence and VLA-4 expression, the CTL clones lost their capacity to eradicate the tumor in vivo. Thus, the higher capacity of CTL clones to produce IL-2 on their own seemed to be correlated with the in vivo efficacy for tumor eradication and the long-term maintenance of their physiological profiles typical of memory T cells.

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