Abstract

Cancer vaccines are based on the concept that tumors express novel antigens and thus differ from their normal tissue counterparts. Such putative tumor-specific antigens should be recognizable by the immune system. However, malignant cells are of self origin and only poorly immunogenic, which limits their capability to induce an anticancer immune response. To overcome this problem, tumor cells have been isolated, genetically engineered to secrete cytokine gene products and administered as cancer vaccines. We used adenovirus-enhanced transferrinfection (AVET), which allows high-level transient transgene expression, to introduce cytokine gene expression vectors into murine melanoma cells. The efficiency of AVET makes laborious selection and cloning procedures obsolete. We administered such modified tumor cells as cancer vaccines to syngeneic animals and investigated their impact on the induction of anticancer immunity. We found that IL-2 or GM-CSF gene-transfected murine melanoma cells are highly effective vaccines. Both of these cytokine-secreting vaccines cured 80% of animals which bore a subcutaneous micrometastasis prior to treatment, and induced potent antitumor immunity. The generation of antitumor immunity by these cytokine-secreting vaccines requires three different steps: (1) tumor antigen uptake and processing by antigen-presenting cells (APCs) at the site of vaccination; (2) migration of these APCs into the regional lymph nodes where T-cell priming occurs; (3) recirculation of specific, activated T-cells that recognize distinct tumor load and initiate its elimination. Extending our previously reported studies, we have now comprehensively analysed the requirements for effective antitumor vaccination in animals. This may also become the basis for treatment of human cancer patients.

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