Abstract

Melanoma, despite its aggressive growth characteristics, is an antigenic tumor expressing several characterized neo- and differentiation antigens. Dendritic cells (DC) when pulsed with defined peptides have been shown to effectively induce melanoma-specific T cell responses in humans and mice. These protect animals from challenge with melanoma, but so far have failed to induce significant tumor regressions. To study the efficacy of DC-based anti-tumor vaccinations, we set up a therapeutic model using C57BL/6J mice with established pulmonary and subcutaneous metastases induced by the B16-melanoma cell line B78-D14. Mice were vaccinated twice with 20,000 antigen-presenting cells, either bone marrow-derived DC or epidermal Langerhans cells (LC), which were loaded with the tyrosinase-related protein 2 (TRP2) peptide. Generally, DC cultured with fetal calf serum (FCS) induced a dominant unspecific response. This was not seen using LC cultured without serum; however, vaccination with TRP2-loaded FCS-free LC alone failed to influence the growth of established B16 tumors. A reproducible reduction of tumor size and weight was only obtained if LC vaccinations with TRP2 were followed by a 5-day treatment of mice with 200,000 IU IL-2 intraperitoneally twice/daily. Omitting the TRP2 peptide abolished the efficacy of this combined treatment, demonstrating the crucial role of priming a melanoma-specific T cell response. Microcytotoxic assays performed with spleen-derived T cells and melanoma as well as congenic fibroblast lines as targets confirmed the TRP2-dependent specificity of LC-induced immune responses. Thus, despite the fact that tumor-specific T cells were primed, an additional IL-2-dependent stimulus was needed to translate this immune response into a therapeutic effect against established tumors.

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